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WEEKLY 0 STATE VOLUME XXXV. COLUMBUS, AVEDNESDAY; OC TOBER 9, 1844. NUMBER 9. I'WH.ISHKU EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING, BY CHARLES SCOTT & CO, Office coruur of Hifiti and Town streets, Bullies' Building. TERMS: Two Irn.l.AHH pkr annum, wlticti mml Invariably I pnid in advniicu, freo uf postage, or of wt ceiitnge w Jiguw or Culler torn. , r The Journal is also published tidily tlurmc llw session or Ihc l.cjiisliiiurs i unci thrirc a wcwk tin- rcumHtder ol die year for 5; and lliro limm a week, yerjy, for THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOHKR H, 1844. C lnjr Club ITlmiiitf. The meeting of the Clay Club, on Tussday evening, wai well ailcndoil. Gen. lliiiion, of Delaware, who wax cspcr-tcd. did not roach iho citv. A few remarks were made by J. Tccsdale, at llie call of llic meeting, after which one of the best addresses of the icasuti wns delivered ly Mr. MTAN-BKRY, of Lancaster, who wns culled out by a committee appointed for lite purpose. The question of annexation was pxumincd in all il bearing, and the momentous consequences that must ensue if the. schemes of llio Aimesatiomsls arcsuc-nssfol. worn denieted most vividly nud faithfully. Tho thanks of ihc Club aro due to Mr. 8. l.om:'I be hiss nii:: The locofoco majore of our city, after having circulated handbills in every direction, found it necessary, in order to prevent a complete failure, to send out the bellman, and a squad of horsemen, U hunt up ami ring out ineir uesponoing followers, to hoar ait address at the mnrkcl homo, from Judge Tallmadgo of lat evening. Like Jehu they rode through the l recti, filling the air with (heir dismal cries, and startling front their kcnnclj a breod of eurs about ni noisy as themselves. After such unwonted efforts, unlike anything ever below witnessed in our quiet city, they succeeded in gathering but a slim crowd, who, accordiug to all arcounts, felt themselves but poorly paid for their trouble. We think die effort of Mr. T. will not recommend him very strongly as an aspirant after a seal on the Bench of tho Supreme Court. . A Miserable Abortion, A shameless attempt is made in the lint Suleiman by some reckless lalsilier, (wlm insults thu rliurcb and cutis reproach on its fair fame, by pretending to speak for "twenty-eight Methodiitt,") to traduce llie character of Mr. Clay. The idea of passing off such wholesale fabrieatiaiu a the productions of "Methodists," is mi supremely ridiculous nnd infamous as lo be unworthy of serious notice. The abandoned character of the production and iu author may lie judged from the following charge delibcrulely made against Mr. Clay, without the slightest foundation in truth, as every child of ten years know: "We 'know' thai dm man whom you herald to the world BHonu of indexible and 'accredited' virhio, has twice stood forth on Hie lield of blood lo uphold that 'rodo of honor ...f.... ii... !iai ,. i' I l.wl hikI mail. slioolinr. in cold blood, one nnlHgoiiisl, and despemlely wouialmg the other." The crowning infamy oi the whole, is the attempt to puss il off as the production of MTifr'.' To enmpkie die work and make il a little more plausible, numcs shuuld bo copied front the toinb-atonet and annexed to it. (.TIiiiaiir T0111011 conic ngiilii." The Statesman bus g"t out that ntd Hit of stmighlouts once more, inchiduig one man fiVud sonir- lime since another (N. P. Tullmadge) who is a good a Whig os he evrr wnsj end others, such as Hon. Wugcr Weldcn, wlai uevcr were Whigs. Hard mil, thnl. If Ins mrfflnK In IminpaJllii We leant from IheVJrbaua Ciliicn, dial the meeting in dial place on the 'tli uli.f was the largest over before convened there. Gen. Anthony and Gen. Mason were die speakers, end made effective efforts. Tho bent spirit prcvuiled, and Champaign, ever true, will do her whole duly. Abort Pnrnrha for cnliss com Idem I Ion. F.VEIIY MAN who thinks we should idj"W Great Hritain to do our manufacturing, furnish all wo w,-:,t, and drain our country of il money to pay for the same, will cast his vote for die locofoco ticket next Tuesday. K.vKttv MAN who thinks wo should open our ports lo Great Britain, and receive the proceeds of her pauper labor free of duty, while she imposes duties almost prohibitory on every thing we produce, will vole llio irceirnuc, naru-niunvy iw and Texas ticket next Tcday. I EvKitr man who thinks we should allow Uridyl Moim(o. lists lo break ilowii our own manufactories, prolralo Amiri-ran l.jdnir, and ihus drive mcc hanics and lalairers to the nil-" livalion of the soil, in order lo provide their own bread, will vole the locofoco ticket next Tuesday and on the 1st day of November. Evkky man who think there is not coinclilion enough in the production of Grain, &.u. in this couulry, and ibmwu had heller raise more, while altlie sanm time wn dmnmh ihc df tHiwl and ilestroy Ihe principal market we now poscs for the consumption of oursurplu produce, will vole, I'olk, Tml, Hlone, McNnlly nnd ull Iho other enemies of Ihe Tariff. Evmiy MAN who thinks that Washington, Jefferson, Mad. ison, and all the other lathers of the Republic, were not nc-.maimed with the true intervals and real policy of the coun try, when they urged so strenuously die piottctiou of Amtri-(iiii Indmtry, will how down ami wnrdiip lh new goiU set I tip by dm "priirfssiee drmocmnj," and cast wit those scl tip by Hie snges and patriot of those lime dial tried men's soul This Ihey wdl do by casting llieir ballots for Iho locofoco ticket next Tuesday. Evchy MAN who Ihinks dial a home market is as bad aa market, and thai Gen. Jarkou was wrong when he urged a more equal division of latmr, and tho taking of men from agricultural labor of nianuracluring, will record his IcmL moay ajaiiisl Protection, by casing his vole fr-r thu locofoco ticket Tueidny. E vr.it Y maw who thinks llnd our own lalmr should not be protected, that il should 1 placed on a fiHiling and in com-lition wilh Euntpean labor, and reduced lo die European Standard, will vote Ihe locofoco lickel next Tuesday. Evriiy MAN who thinks it bcllor to take Texas, "rcgnrd-less of consequences," lo pay her debt, more or less, fight her battles, and thus enrich speculators and shavers who hold her bomb, for the sake or lauds already deeded away two or three limes, as Mr. Itetilon declares, find lo give llio slave dwlderi of thai country a right to vote on theirslave-property, will voio the .Locofoco tiekol n al Tuesday, and from iIimi time forward. tivMtr man who thinks (hat Mr. Clay did not Fpeak as became a natriol and slHlesnian, when In derlerm! mat en would only coiiKiil to Auneialioii, when il could be done 'itilhoHt ttar, without dishonor, and with the tommmcowent of the Union," will vole the I.ocmo hckol next I utwiay. KvFRr man who Ihinks dial "Hank Reform" has condu ced lo ihe prosperity of Ihe Slate, that Hartley's nnli-Hank I.nw is lust sticlt a law at wo waul, ami tnai wo can oo oei ter wilh Ihe currency of the surnamding Stales Ihan wilh one of our own creation, within our own control, wdl vote for David TuH and llio l.orofoeo liekel. Evtttr man who iltMires thu uMnMiihmunt of die Sub- Trouumv with ill bolts, bars and leg -treasurers, will vole Ihe Lnrofoco lit kel. EvrnY man who think that honest Mardeeai ttartlftf, who liclM)d lo delend the verjf soil we now siaud npoii who ha liilcd many piU, and never betrayed a liml who h.u nearly all his blc tilled tho mil, and agaiiul whose character the vdeU daro nol lisp a charge, is unworthy or thu (iulwrna-lonal ('hair, and iucaKiMe or admitusleriug its duties honestly ami faithfully, will vote for lAirisf 2W, the time serving, o'llire-scekingrlemagoRueof Tmnihull cimmy. EvinY man who thinks thai Caleb J. McNully is a more honest, upright and moral eiliien, uud will more honorably represent thedistricl in tho counsels of llienaiou than Columbus IK-Iano, will not liiiatc lo cat his vote for him. KvaiiY MAN who opposes wing principles, and considers A. V. Stone abeiior Itrmocrat, nud abler man than James Htaiibcry, Jr., will undoiibtodly cast bis vole a-aisl the lalltr next Tuesday. H r The New York prs aro filled with a glowing ic count of Ihc greatesl meeting ever held in the rity, by any party. We have room only fir a brief paragraph, from Hie N. V. Tnbune: THE GRAND RALLY OF THE COMMERCIALEM-PltltlUM. The rrealest political im-elutg ever held within ihe cily of New Yrk assembled nn Thursday lat within auttnroumt fta-IUI1. Krom Hroa.bvav lo Centre street, (some fitly rods) ihe whole width of Cuiml street , (i rnd) was ocru- p.rl ly tho miwioor pan "-' ';:'-,'. hiKSMl mut have been in allrmlanre. rroin I EN I'll" i.i:im.'v i' M'l'lMtM t i!m same lime the ifvonle were ad- irr..,.it hv Garrett Havis. of Keuuirky, m. K. Homl, ol t)lno L. r'. Alien, of lluffnln, Hugh Matwrll, Hinlley Scl-len 'Joseph I. White, J. N. ReMiold.i. John C. Hamilton, H E lavi. Thomas Clirviinl. Geo. W. Hlnnl, J. H. Aik- u i-n. ..I l.l n. II. M. Whilnev. J. Towler. lr Hiid twenty or thirty nlhrr speakers were hrard some of .,M,ikers for ihe first time. We have doubtless omitted the names of some of tho ablest among Ihem, as il was impossible, wilh die aid of two reporters, to catch even the Ii nines of hair or ihem. The display of banners, torches, ic, was beyond all precedent. No ineetinir equal in iiu:h-bcrs'nr spirit, eer assembled iu lla-cily of New York. The principal stand wai creeled on the side of Canal Ireel. oppoiie l National H'dl. All immense- throng having gathered at this point, die meeting wn called to order at H o'clock by Edward Minium, V.m) , on whose motion it was oremmed b'v the nppoinimenl of ihe Honorable MOSES II. GiHNNEl.lL, as l'rujtdent, Id Vice Presidents, and il Sec- A dnVinrdly outrage was cnmmilted during the evening by the Kmptr .', b"'"1 nf pug'liis, bullies, gambler and pick-pnekets, wlto have (we blush for the country while we tell ii) been encouraged to form ihennelvcs into a political elnh. This l.neofoco club is comiiosed of the iniwl despcr- ale wretches of N. Y. City, one of whom was convicted or mi inlnmoiis nssaull uimhi a feiuule but a few days since, but pardoned by Gov. Uourk. An attack was mndu on tlw rear or the Whig procession, at three points, by these abandoned wretches. A numtw of banners were destroyed nud stolen, end a largo number of persons were injured by blows from " sltine-hol. clubs and knives. A drep feeling of indignation has horn excited among (he honest and virtuous eititens of New Yorki and a determination is expressed to resist such as attack thu next lime, iu a utftiiuf r that will be fiudl (Victory! Victory:! The !piliil of Troise Hueaka!!! A Whig JTIator nud Ovo ut Ward-!! We had Ihe pleasure a few days since, of recording the Whig victory in Louisiana, by which a Whig majority was gniued in the Senate of that Stale, where lasl winter u stood f tocofbeos to icrcn wings, and wo are now, uy sups mim the Nashville papers, placed in possession or n triumph on signal and encouraging in tho very rapilul of Tennessee, among Mr. Polk's wizhbori! The following. Irom me nawmo Whig, corroborated by the nanner, lells the cheering laic, and shows how Iho tide is selling: vit ruuv 7i NAiMivii.rr. Ac goes the no Hoi so a oca ibr- liiiite. CITY ELECTION WHIG MAYOR TEN OUT OP T W E I. V E WHIG A L D E R M E N, AND WHIG CONSTAHLE! The result of the municipal election to-day affords renewed assurnnce thai our good city is Whig to the com. Looking nt the exiraordinan iiillucuccti again! which wo have to bailie wilh Locofocoism, e have the vanity lo believe thai Nashville can marshal, whenever Hie occasion calls for it, thu truest Whig population in llie Union, and this duy's woik will excuse the presumption. , ..,., . , Oim Winn Mavoh, POWHATTAN W. MAXEY, IS RE-ELECTED BY !00 uiniority. Alilenuen. The Whigs having carried five mil of Ihe six Wnrds, elect TEN ALDERMEN out of the twelve that compose the Council! and in the Gth Word pushed hulh llio Loco candidates within two or three voles of a lie. The majority for the Whig Town Lonslnble is wu. Still Another Victory! We learn hy tho National Intelligencer, lhal an election held in East Harford. Connecticut, Inst week, resulted in Ihe election of tho Whig Assessors and llonrd of Relief, by mow than a hundred majority! For Ihree years pnl this lowu has been locofoco, excepting lat April, when ihe v lug Hep-rjsenlalives were chosen by less llmu twenty ninjority. Thus roll on (he ball, north and south. The Vnti of IlrilUh Uoltl. This question is exciting deservedly earnest attention. TVtere can be no earthly doubt hut that Hritiih money ii ttted in thit country to disseminate Free-trade doctrinei, with the dexign of influencing our EUctioni, Wo express this belief deliberately, and with a clear view ol Ihe tacts, llio noxi ouestion is who are die recipients, and who among us shall be held responsible for tins crime again! Amkhican interests! Shall we hold the great body of the miscalled ' D. mocratic" parly responsible I Hy no moans. Hut we have a right to siiinct nay, we cannot help suspecting Iho leaders of thai changeable cnmbiiiation or politicians who call themselves " Democrats " or being willing accessories, and, iu mnny instances, direct participants in lite unnatural fraud, Istctusc of two facts 1st, their entire change of front on this subject in ihc northern Stales within the last two years and, Silly, their inability to give any reason for tins change founded on erjte-rirttce connected wilh llio working of the Erce-lrade and Pro tective systems, or based on fact ancrling iho data on which the iwo theories rest, Tho opinions of the lenders of the Democratic" liariy. dclibcrnlely Ullered to-dny, are aban- doncd lo-mnnow, and no reason given for thu change other than that Ihe " parly " has " progressed " beyond its fornir position. And why changed f In this lies tho answer : llio relative tuloresls of Iho country have not changed llie policy foreign nations has not changed but m k have changed! And' what ha changed Ihem I Paiity iutorel, not public interest mo.hky, nol itrjrtimntt! Do wc mean In say that men have hud their pockets tilled witli gold as a orue i No, nol exHclly thai. Hut the leaders iu this movement, including Krec-irnde advocates, Nullifiers, nnd Speculators in Texan Scrip, have contrived to fasten on the parly their candidate, nnd then comes iu all Ihe iulluences which may bo iipHc,d lo lollow iu Iho (rain of such a combination, lo brilie some, to overawe others, nnd in all these operations party machinery is used, imposing on die weak and unsuspecting, and stimulating iho cupidity iff the mere parly hack and Under in politics. This would lai tolerubte, did il begin nud end with our domestic politics ( bul il slreli-hes into foreign lands iu authors seek alliances wilh foreign inlerests foreign money is used, and our elections become Ihe engines of foreign intlueiiees, by which men are placed in power to sustain aor-eign policy against a purely mrrinm policy. Lei the can did reader look at the fuels which lutvelieeti already nuuucea on this subject. And llieu let him ask himself who composo tho I'rec-lrnfle League in England from which spring this movement on our country I They arc Jtitmut Ma niji ac- TUitutts! And who arc their adjuncts m America i mo Slave dealer the Nullifier the Disunionisls of the planting Stales the advocates of Annexation! And arc the lenders oflhis combination lo be seriously called Democrats"! Hithey are Jacobins, Seclioiiisl ; and can clniin no affinity in principle wilh die fathers of ihc Demnerntic parly, as is shown by their abandonment of ull the ancient landmarks. They have ceased In lie Ihe advocates of American interests. They are but tho echoes of Arguments coined by Hrilish writers, and are acting in concert with Hrilish ngeulf. This combination of men who in Congress legislate for British Manufacturers, leaving our Farmers a prey to iho prohibitory eorndaws ol England have stationed al Wash ington a Committee lo publish and dissemminalc documents iu supKrl of their views. In Tract No. Ii, published by older of this Committee composed of " Democratic Members of Congress," nl page six, will bo found these passages : At a recent meeting nt the rrec I raup League, m-in at Manchester. sisl thousand dolliiM (prnrlwal proof ol sincerity that'.) were cohVeleil inn single day. Three hundred and titty Uwtuamt datt'tre nare oern suuwnnrn iu inr gnpurjnnu tint t"tMnH, alren.tii ; and ihe fiientte of that Auorintiim confidently atttrt that', " if Herniary, double the am-nnt trill be rained nt.tt year.'1 These vast Mint are expended indissein- uting cheap pamphlets, explaining mm eiimrcmg ttic ooc- truiesol tree-trade, l.asl venr, in in course m hi sitm, one million package, eacfi containing twelve shoil trocts, were gratuitously dilnbuied ihronyhntit tin-at Hrilnin. ltiu while Ihe Ineiids ol equal ngtits in r.ugiami are inns nobly waging battle ugaint the monopdy of their protectee njitem, we are cdh'd upon to foiter the miaitity they are din-carding; nnd as ihey chase the mighty monster from his den in the Old World, we are lo receive aiid pamper lum in tho rich fields and free forests of tho New !" Here is an acknowledged svmpaihy with the Hrilish Man ufacturer, iu their war against the industry of other nations. The movement in England is understood as being aimed at Ihe rising manufactories of Germany and llio Cin'ed Stale for, lei il l understood J ho rcinclivc policy nl England is mil directed at iheir own industry and Kree-lradc with them means, free lo go out for a market, bul not free lo come in lo England for one ! Tin is the difference between Free-trade in England and America. And we call iqani every inde pendent voter every mnn who love his country, anil means to sustain her interests against Iocs Irom without and h from within, lo look well lo these things, and beware lest he lends himself lo sustain a HttiTtsii party in America, wlun hi leatt intendt it. I.el cverr Aiuvricnu C'lllxeu ronl lb tlecortl m( Juuara K. 1'olU'- Irp li"rncr: We invite the calm, serious consideralion of every Ameri can eilixen, to Ine lollowiug irom too mnwntn ih"!" r loiiclung die votes of James K.Polk. Nol a slnteinenl is here made, not o fad t here recorded, for which wo do nut hold ourselves responsible, ullhoogh il may be considered a work of supererogation, when il is known from whal source we conv. Who is there, in whose breast there glows a spark of patriotism, nud who i not insensible lo emotions of grati tude, who run vole for James Iv. I'olk, in view ol men a re- rdf W here is die man, hottest, disinterested mnn, whose heart is alive to the appeals of honor, virtue, and truth, who can contribute to ihe elevation of James K. Polk lo ihe Presidency of the United Stales while such charges simd m judgment against him, lo bo viewe I by the whole world? His friends dare not, nicy win not riK inetr veracity, uy u-lioniug what we copy below from the National luu-lligencer. THE R EVOLUTION A KY t r r Hl-iia ahu o"-DIERS.ti .. . .inn.niunnl ronrnurli lo Renublies liml ihe v are un- gralelul. We have uo tune hero to uxuuuue ihe insiory oi Ihe ancient Republics wilh relerence lo Hie juiien ui mis c-:iiuro. In our own days, we rejoice ilt.il il has been repel led by lite conduct ol tins internment, m reiaumi io im surviving officers and soldier in the Revolutionary war, ol whose services and sacrifices if our Government have not repaid ihem wilh the splendid gilts and pensions witti wiucn DunnM-an Government have m frcqneul instance rewarded )arlicu- lar successful soldiers and statesmen me recompense, i.ir ro-moved Irom parsimony, has been such as a Uepubhcan Government could with pmpriety oiler, and such as f Republican citizen might, wilh self-respect, receive. Had, however, thu politics ot' Mr- P"lk prevailed in tlie House of Ki'prcientalives, when die principle ol the Revolutionary Pension Hyilem wn established, the thousand ol the veterans of the war of Independence, die evening of whose life has been cheered and blessed by the IhiuiiIv ol Iheir country, would have dragged out, loo often in abject poverty, the miserable remnant uf iheir earthly existence, The votes which lie had nu opportunity to give on iho subject uller he came uilo public tile, leave no doubt on the mind that, had he entered it eight or len vears earlier, die sin of ingratitude would, so far as dccwie"d ukhi him, ye I lie al ihe door of die Republic. llu voles in Ihe House of Representatives m the years ft:i. HW7, HUH, IH-HI, lUl 1 . MH, ns recoidtd in die Jour-nals of Iho House, against bills lor the rebel of Revolutionary otlieers uud soldiers, runsliiule a monument, more durable limn bras, lo his waul of litasralitv, to say nothing of jus- lice, lo the aged survivors ot dm Revolutionary Army; lo those who had haiaided every thing lor their country 111 ihe lime that tried men's souls, uud who now, iu tiodily infirmity mid indigent rirmmsiiuice, appealed to ihe National Legis- luro lor a remuneration, mil loo large lor mo conniry io iw able to spare, nnd lor dieir priceless services how inadequate a reward! Wi-ll mkdii tliR si'dil of the oelnifenarv prnsioiiprs vet sur- tfinrf have siieeesied lo their descendaiiH or friends the motto on a imuncr, wnrcli we see was pnraiiL- u in-iim i late public occaston: "No Pmsiojmts, says I'ui.K: No I'oi.k: bat thk i rbio.-.h. The same narrow spirit as wn displayed by Mr. Pom io rfi'ard In tin- Riivoliilioiiarv survivors eencrullv was dis- plaved towards failhlul pubhe servnnls in Ins voles in other pariu-nlar cases. Il the Itepuldie ever hail a true patriot an. ii liiiibhil itnblic servant. Jam s.s Mo.niiok was thai man. II had u claim upon his country, for arrearages uud exienes incurred in the public service, which in l!!-h Con.'rei dirla-r..rl o, lu iit. mill nnlrrcd lo n: imitl. Mr. 1 OI S voted against (laving either the principal or the iiilen l uf il- A.r:li,i. n'lit.11. noon sonic sitPiilemeiU.irv bill for the final a rjusliiieiil of thnl claim, Mr.Pol.K voted against it, mid ac companied ins vote wiin ine rcinaru, nr n.HBimiir.i - would have choked nlimisl uuy other man, that "tins indivni ual hat no claim upon thu Aithott! Ileenterlaitied the same opinion, prnbably.of Mjor(i ner-nl Jaioh Huowa, that most worthy num and brave soldn r, whose blood tfnwed In-ely for pw country nnd in her honor, in the war of WWL When, on hisdeaih.m Htli.theca'.eol his willow and family eaino U-foio Congress liir some legislation, in the way of a slit;lii compeiiatioii Ibr services which had, beyond doubt, shurleiied the life of iheir Mipmrtcr and pro-teclor, Mr. I'ol.K voted ng.i i usl iho bill introduced for Ihe mrposo of relieving them, which, however, notwithstanding siippoMiiou. oecaiut! a mw. A like ihankles spirit was urunfeOrd bv Mr. Pol.K, when, IH.it), on the loss of dm Cnii.-d Slates dnp i faruet, the idows and orphans of the ollicers mi l M iiuieii who perisli-il on hoard of her. iMHilioned the Legisl.iiure of iheir cniin- try fiir rebel. Hu w. one ol lorty-lwo Ri-pr-eniatives who t.'.tixl nir.iitKl 1 1 in toll lor irrauliiitr such relief, one hundred and thirtv-eiglil voles being given (lortiuialely) on the ollu r side. Ytil. il i said, du re ate ollin-n of the navy, whosup- Mirl the eleeiiotiof Mr. Polk. Into what inconsistencies will not the fury of parly lend men! THE SUPPRESSION Or THE SLAVE-rKAI'r.. Whatever ihtlerence of opinion mav exist, anioii iliose li.i live oudnr dill'erenl decrees of latitude in our conniry, concerning the institution ol slavery euiatled ohh it by die tinveritmcm irom wturn we were s-p.irniru "k-" tinu ol ludeH.tid.,liep1 lln-reean he. at this day, lit lie diversity of sentiment as lolhu Inifbanlv and almmmalion of the Aln- can slave-trade. Interdicted in our own (Mitts al tin; earliest moment thiii die t oiistilul:oii would allow, it has never since enjoyed iu any pari of tins emmlry any smpaihy or eoniitc- nance. aiii'Mik me inoi enniesi nim prrs-'-rii; .i of it, in every form, is the H. n. Cm vtu.r r i stun Mi k-ckii. who, during mnnv years' service iu public hie, never omiilcd any opportunity I aiulesl bis abhorrence ol it, uud to induce l ongrc 10 no ine snme. On tho ;H dnvof Msrch, HUI, Mr. illKRcr.R moved, in Ihe House of Represenl-dives, the following resolution. ilriotred, Thai the President of the Uuded Stales he re quested lo renew and lo pmwculu, from lime lo lime, such iieiioliuliHlion wilh the several iiuiraiiuie Powers of Europe ami Americn, a he ipav d.-eui expedient for the i H'cciual ah-(liimu ni i)u Afro-nn slave lriide. and lis iillimalo deuuncia- imn, a piracy, under the law uf nations, by llie consent of the civilized world.' On llio Birn-eiuir lo llu resolution, llie Previous nuesiion, moved bv Mr. Pol.K. having been agreed to. tin que.lion was taken on the passage of tho resolution, and decided nllir-malively, as follows: Yi ia1 It Nt'ys Messrs. Alexnnder, Harbour, Hamwell, James Hlair, Houbha. Canon. D tii'i'l, W. R. Davis, D.-dia, IMd-lev. Foster, tiaitlier. Hall, ILivnes, Hiil. C. JMin-on, La mar. Lea. Lovull, Nuckalls. Ov.-rlou, Pall.m. POLK,l'-t-ler. Rencher. Riiainj SH'iirht, Wilty, Thouipsou, Treivanl, Wiekhlle, ilde, 1 aiieey Nu I lu rKtfilin wilh nut ceil III. Alllmtigh in the atH m Hire of the question, we find such mineul Southern ami We: tern name aslho-eof Dk mo, I, (.mint, and Mi Diri-nr., Mr. Pol.K could not vole wilh it, V..I. .I n.,iail llw fr.ollllloll. We hnve emnpleied the review winch we propose.! to (air-Ives or Mr. Pm.lt 'a uiMie career. We cm discover in it i mrii hot ihiti of iudnorv. a oualiiv lnud.Ulo m ilsell, but, in eombmulioH with his had polities, only serving Iu make die locotocoism ol Mr. Pol.K more active and niicioii e liul no reason, in a survey r In political life, for trusting bun wilh Ihe power which constitutionally iiemng to a i fi-mui-im of the Dinted Mmles. and slill less wilh tluve wl' h, Willi Ihc Xiimple (M'toro In in which he wonci uinuMn.ie.uy sirnc 10 iuoiuii. ho tn.L-lil of his own mere will undertake lo exercise. Wi. liml fin ilu emilrurv. lhrooi;lioul llu w lnne History 01 ni public ble, cimchnivc objeel.ous ag.imsl Inisitur hun with power of any kind, and, least uf all, with nb-miuie power over llie present weiiare ami iinun- hi y " II oi us nnrsuna il orv. wc can oisroci i x ih ir fy the elevation of Mr. Pm.K to die Presidency, it remain only for u lo iiiqu rc wheth-r there was any Hung in thr numner an.l eirrum itancra of the nomination to rec lend himm' his frllow-cilini g.-m-rally, as a suitable candidate for their sudraires for the lushest irit-l in their gill. J Ins in- uiry shall bu made the subject ol a tuluru uunilier. The Jasma-fncMl. Our adversaries do many tricks of deception; but one ol the scurviest is that recently perpetrated by Ihe editors of the (itobe. and which is cihibitud in the following extracts, l lie first is from the prospectus of the Globe for Soulliern distribution tho second from that for Northern distribution. Rend them: J'lOipfCtttt Dollar rroipectui of the Dollar (itobe, under tnchmre o t'tooe, under encioure oj lion. Ihtvid S. Jletd of North ( aroltna. Exlrnct.1 Is a national debt, to bolster up such a bank, and support the government here di'liaucc oi inu as ildoes m Li ifonuiar win, i . Hid, nircaoy I ton. A. Hidlack of Venn- tylrania. Eilracl.1 Is a national debt, to holster up such a bank, to support the government here ill defiance of the popular w ill, as II floes in Migiann. Bireniyi- iruialed hv Mr. Clay du-J righmled by Mr Clay during riim his short rciin i the . hisshorl reign in the chu skin Congress, calculated lo givo lum Die kiillragrsnl ine nniioii for Ihe presidency! Is li'S disiribolion Inw, wasting the proceeds ot the public domain, provided by our revolutionary fathers as a sacred fund for Ihe defriirc of our Republic, and grndually lo I extended as homes for actual settlers, idler being ccudcmiied by the people, suddenly lo increase the popularity of die author of the nefarious scheme, w hich he himself denounced in Iheear-Itt-r and heller days of his political career ! coon-skin Congress, calcula ted lu give lum the sulfrages of the nation for llie presidency ! IS THE DISHONEST. FRAUDULENT sail EXORBITANT TARIFF OF MIL CLAY'S CON-GRESS, LEVY INW TAXES UPON THE PEOPLE FOR THE NECESSARIES OF LIFE, HH) PER CENT. HEYOND THE REVENUE DUTY, Tor the HENEFIT of the OVER GROWN CAPITALISTS, LIKELY T PROMOTE IIIS FURTHER poLI'l l- CAL ADVANCEMENT I his dihiribuiioii law, wnsl- inr the proceeds of the tiublic domain, provided by our revolutionary fathers as a sacred Kind lur the defence ol the Ite-puhlic, and gradually to he extended us homes for actunl tilers, as our pnpmalioit ex puuds, aler lieiug condeuuied py t in1 peopic.su. neiiiy 10 increase llie populnrilyol the hu thor of the nefarious scheme which hu himself denounced thu cither nud belter days of his pnlilicnl career! Now, in t ihts loo contemptible ton villainous loo Driv elling even for the comiei:r uf Amos Kendall I Mlnrtllng, conclusive, IrrrsUllblr smf Hint Brll-Issla Jold i rsnployrd to Inlliiesire tho roiuinsj election! Rrnd! Itrnil! If there is in the Slnle of Ohio, n single individual who has been incredulous lunching the farts already published, slew ing dial Hrilish Gold has actually been subscribed and brought Iu this country to in linear o Iho coming c'celioii, let lum reud the following, nnd he enn doubt no longer. Such evidence cannot bo questioned 1 and in view of the startling Incls in possession of llio freemen of the country, wo would ask if thvy ran hesitnlc ns to their duly. II llio American people nrc not lit for llio yokes nnd chain m colonial vassalage, ihi-y have nol concluded lo bend the knee nnd surrcntlcr lluir dearest inlvrcits, rights and privileges, at the behest of parly, foreiiru dictation uud liefore Ihe iiilluenre of a base bribe. lltev will prtclniin a Veidirl through the ballot box, at tho coming election, thai shall utterly obhlernio the lasl vestige of lorofoeoism from the land. Read the testimony ! I lie lead ers of tho opposition may venture so mr, for the purpose of deceiving you, as to call in question a statement lo which is attached tho name and seal of thu lending Justice of the Pcare, of Wheeling Va. Hut we warn yon ngaiust their tiutained denials, ami wo warn Ihem to Ikj careful to what lengths ihey carry iheir laincriiy and deception. Ouce more wc call the solemn nlloulioii ol every ireo voter to the follow ing, puUidird nmirr the editorial had, of the Wheeling Ttmei, of Tneday last. Freemen, decide shall Hruisli Gold prevail ! To honest men among our oponcn(i wo would say. is there not a point beyond which you cannot foi low party T From the Wheeling Times. Tho Hrilish UwtA prove!. Wo have published evidence that there were subscriptions of moiii'V in England lor the puroc ol securing Ihe election of Polk and Dallas, tho Free Trade candidates, enough lu snti-fy any man dud the orc-enl eaiivais was rarried on by the Lnrnlocn parly tiiou HKl TISIl GOLD but wc are not yel done with the 'proof. Rend, rend Americans, ihe following extract of a letter from John Og len, a man Working in A inuiiiiiHriiirinir establishment in Euulniid.lo his son in lln.ciiv. "1 wns in London about a work nt;o. They are raising money lo semi to sttiiixtrt Polk and Dallas tor President, There is nothing doinr here in our 'lf,"ff(V ur watchword JOHN (Ml DEN. Persnnnllv annearcd before me, a Justice of llie Peaco in nnd for Ohio county, Thomas Ogdeu, and made oath that the nlmve is a true and genuine rstract frmi a b rier he received Irom hi father uow living in Selling, England, oaled August io. inu. Given under my hand this ."Mi day or .NeplemN-r. UHARLtSD. KNOX, J. P. The Antidote rboinn Ii. limner re, Tketisne 1,. Ilnuier! We cannot more effectually answer the argumenis nose used by Thomas L. I lamer, against a National Hank and Prolcc live Tanlf, than by ihe um or his own speeches nnd argil mi-nls, mode in IU.U. While we freely concede all dial Mr-I lamer' friend can ask , as to his talents, we cannot avoid lite conclusion thnl no man iu the Stale hasliceii more fickle and changeable on nil the leading questions of the day. Micro was more truth limn poetry in tho declarations of Medary alioul him, as published in the Journal a few days since, and (iiioUid Irom a letter written by him at Cincinnati. Our space will nol allow us to quote al length from Hauler's address lo the volers of the Filth Congressional District, dated Angus! Id, but wo shall Kivc a lew of his potilwne, and iho render can eHsil) infer what kind or mi argument an able man liku him would make iu their support, lu the first pinto he declares of a U. S. Hank, "II il t.viMitultnnal, I nm tferf.rtlu wtiititd that Cou-'ress possesses IMiwcr, under llie Federal Constitution, lo creule u bai'k.(" Again: says Mr. Hamer iu the same address "It it I-.xpfdirnt Again, I Iwlieve it is expi tlieiil lo h ivo a I'niled Slates fin nk if wo can have one Hhii lair mid proper principles. 77iii hat been the opinion of every head t the Trratuty 'r-pari me nt (fath Federal and lirpubikanjfrom RiJert Jor-m. ihe great financier of the JltroluliiiH , down to Lnui$ M'l.ant, the prettnt fret clary of the 'J'rtaniry, both iwlu-tire. The Turin. Mr. Hniner made a very strong argument in favor of a I'rotrctire Tariff in iho same nddrcss. After saying dial free trade would aiuwer, if nil would adopt tl, ho concludes thus . .... Hat when one Nnlion ndupts Us reiiriclive po'iry, for ilia purpose of promoting her own intercuts ami crippling llio trade, rommerce, m.iuiil'nciuri's and agriculture ol oi her nations, they are ohligrd, iu self defence, to resort to rooplt-r- 'filling measures. I liev mtisi ciiner oo so. nr auow ine ior- eign ualioii lo legislate lor lliem, and inu lo rcuuer ttiein inn- ilaries, While Uiey are iMiojungui ineir incowiu midiiiuvh.-u-lenco. fr-r-Maiy Democracy U stub lie si laslrpcn dears the Ifenuiliw of louiteucy Kxbibtled In Obey in if Orde The Wholu lorminii n fairly Ii04kiM-4jilMat PROGRESSIVE DEMOCRACY. From the Cincinnati Enquirer. " The man who VA H a Democrat twenty fit wan ago, md etttertaint the nrincipleu NIHV.tliat (lumrtu 1)ID twen ty-tire yean ago, and h xinol iKonhi;sii.li viih the party, hut re inaimit stationary . JtHJ I tv r.i l l ri it. j .ak.B ill.HIM) TIK'TIMKS AMD THE PARTY. "Hr. is Mot A Dkmociut NOW. Nay, the man who standi in relation to some principles now where the Democratic imriy didii.tLT rr.H vkahs iuu, 18 NOT A DE.MO-CRA'l'NOW. l'otimrrndHFeyorrowd. If you would be esteemed n Deuiocral of IttlJ, you mint abandon a po tioti of your HVP F. ti AiUA TK D FAITH. Twenty-seven years ago, in HJHi, the Dkmuchatii- party, in Congress, under llie Dkmockatic adiniiiisiratiuuuf Aladismt KsTaB- i.isifttt a Hank uk thk U. States. A large portion of the Mriy ktqijHised such nu iiistiiulimi coiisliluuounl, awl all tsppeiir lo h.ive thought ils charter sound policy and it wns not till near Iweuiy years alter thai the parly changed f'l'-S PRINCIPLES in' regard to a Hank. If you then enterlain the same principles which you entertained in common with Ihe parly twenty-five years ago, in relation to this question, YOU ARE NOW IN FAVOR OF A HANK OF THE U. MTATKcJ TO HE CHARTERED HY CONGRESS. If you are, vou cannot be a Democrat of 11)13, though you were in lUld-'Ift. Ten years ago the Parly in Ohio ivkhk 15 i avor or Static Hanks, and actually Fronted, by acts or Legislature, many couriers. You doubtless believed in common wilh the party, in those Hank dnririues; you acted with the parry, lint the Df mocralv of Ohio art now op- pitted to them. If you T i i.l, adhere to ynur political faith of i.M, m relation to inese mailers, you ahk hut a dkmockat Now, Twenty-five years ugo, the Democratic party thk WMOI.K couitkv luslilied nud sustained a HIGH TA- iti v r . ruieeii years nt;o, m.n io o., t ur, i ahi i as a Iv sustained the PRO I E("!'IVE TARIFF of llt'jit. vel the party A n A r A It if tt now oppotea to a J Alii r t jot flit) I AC i ION. If you stand m reierence lo this question where the parly DID iweuly-Hvc, nr nulv ten years ago, you aro NOT H 777 THK PARTY NOW. I miirht continue lhi coulrnsl between the I'RESEN I and tOR-MlUi POSITIONS OF THE PARTY, upon other question. Hut the contrast upon ihn surjecis ol' National Itnnb Kitn Itm.L mill Tar.iT nr.- olln-ii-nl l toaliiiii mv nn. Mlioti.tlml ON EVAN NOT UK A DEMOCRAT NOWt W HO ENTERTAINS Till. NAME OPINIONS HE HID TWENTY-FI VE OR EVEN THIRTY YEARS AOO, Al.THOIHiH HE MA Y THEN HA VE ACTED WITH THE PARTY. AND UEEN FOR THAT DA Y A UUOD DEMOCRAT." The Protest Or An Attempt nl Indrpnndcnce. Exirnct from the Letter ' To thk I k hoc it act or Ohio" Signed W. Allen, lleuj. Tappan, John H. Weller, J. llriuk-erhoof, Emery D. Poller, II. St. John, W. C. MCauslen, Joseph Morris, J. Matthews, E. iK-an, A. Duncan, Hon-oroide Memben of Concrete,) dated Washimutun, Uay 1, II! 13. " We your Democratic Delegation in the two Houses of Congress, DEPLORE THE NECESSITY WHICH COMPELS US TO ADVISE YOU ihtl, notwithstanding this slnle of facts, we hare reaton to fear thnl a very serious movement has lor weeks txicn on tool in Una my, in ttic ah- hs.m r. or' thk rKori.K,wmcnis inteuiieo lo act, u possipiu, upon (hat t oiiveiiiion, aiin lo uidtire trial liooy Io hkt Asimk THE WILL OF THE AMERICAN DEMOCRACY, lliu exphritcly and solemnly expressed Co ditcjrd the man in tehme favor that will wat to espreitrd, nnd lo iioiiiiuutv in his stead tomt other, ot a lT otiii.ii jierson." The fieri ti lie mf C'onaiateiiey. From the Ohio Slalesmau of F'rom Ihc Statesman, June 2d Mayl!). "They thu people will " When the proMsed an- jnol vole for men pledged to neiatioii was first broached, tuitain England in her gratp-it was nrrtimpnuu-d by an out- ingfvr Tesat , and interfering cry ngaiusi tlie Hrilish lor at- .with our own cause in that tempting lo gel possession of matter, as tin Clay parly aro. the country. Tlie cry was! ' They will ask, whal host- " England would gel hold of ness is il of (lueen Victoria, it am) alolili slavery." I he 1 whether wc run our lines a Hrilish would get Texas and LITTLE FURTHER raise cotton, to ihe if real iuju- SOUTH, or a little further ry .u ine rsnutucro pianif-ts. iiiarui r I tiey woiihl make a Pee couil " Ihey witl ask, it it was Iry there, and all our slaves important to England lo have would run off to them." This a piece of our territory off laie was mr ine people io iininc in ine norin-wett. may sciie ineir jf.Aioi f.tr, ami n not io equally l.Ml'iiK- From die Nashville ltauner, Mr, t'lny'a Horse njboee. We take pleasure in lavint before our readers tho following i me renting- correnpuiidetice: iNAHftvii.l.K, August Vi, 1H1L To tlte Hon. II. CVuw. tiin; VVo bee lo iircHOiit to you a aot of Horse iStioen, mailo by ua at the bead of the Liberty J'ule in NuBhville, li' feut from tho ground, on the HHh ot tins preHcnt moiilh. P len so have tin1 in put upon your Saddle Homo, and maytlio Spirits of VasliiiieLont Warren, and all our patriot ic dend, watclt over vou and be like r.ltinh h mantle to Kliiha. WILLIAM DRIVER, UKNRY AMKNT, WILLIAM 8TKWART, To the Hon. II. Clay, Aalilund, Ky. AfiiLAMD, Hist Aueust, 1644. (lentlemrn I have this duv safely received set of Horse Shoos inude by you "at the head of tho Liberty Pule in NaHltville, sixty two feet from the ground, on tho tenth of this present month." I thank you cordially for this highly acceptable present. The accocintiona with which tho manufacture ol these shoes is connected between Heaven and Kurt 1 1, on a Liberty Pole, iU feet from the ground, in Nanhville give to your present an extraordinary interest. I shut I use it as you request. May nil your strokes, in Politics and on the Anvil, ever bo as well directed os those wncn wore enipioyea in nioking these shoes! Health, lone lives, and prosperity to you all. Such is the fervent wish of your faithful friend and obedient servant, II. CLAY. Messrs. William Driver, Henry Ament, and William Stewart, &c. Happy Device, The following devices were in a procession of tho Whigs of Alleghany county, Miiryland: Shohmakrhs. Cluy first, Clay hat, L'ltty awl tho time. BLACKSMITHS. The motto wns "Clny & Protection We strike for Clay the sons of Vulcan." T1X.NKHS AND COI'PKIISMITIIS. Clay, Tariff, end Union, versus Polk, free Trade, and Texas. PokieSfVou can't "wl soddtr" us. BAICKMAJIF.il I, By Clay we live SCULPTORS AND STONK -CUTTERS. The Union stands a Monument, To gallant Henry Clay." CARI'F.NTF.RS. " Tis plane their Sfreir ore all loose. This lores the Locos and augers well for Clay." CAItlPIKT MAKERS AND UPHOLSTF.RF.ltS, "Cluy made a good Secretary Hu must be boss Cabinet maker," Another " Know us by our works." COOPERH, "American Independence. Let every tub sfnnd on its own bottom." RAKKIIS. "Tho East is good, tho Soulh is raisivgt The West will keep tho Fre blnzintr." Henry Clay A friend in A-neunl Is a friend indeed." IlKIVK TIILM IN Til AN N F. X AT ION WIT 11 A III Nil. lien the 1 rralv wns sent in for eouliimniiou, il wns mil In lR3(i tho banks of Ohio piid into tho State Treasury in the shape of a tax $;i,Hly 71. In IH II, this tax will not exeud fiiMimi. iicoioco policy has destroyed this source of rove into and foreign bonds to circulate their nnus free of tax anion jr us. Porhnpi the tux payor will think uf this about these days, Ohio's all tiro of tho proceeds of Iho sate of tho public lands would axerngo about $;itMI((KK) per annum: If Me had the bttnk tnx of W and this land fund, which it is tho nol to v of the Whigs to obtain, the burden of ONK HALP of tho taxation of tho Stato would bo relieved. Think of that tax payers. Summil Utaioiu A f nfrwisusl War ",0 -fo Brl1 The junior editor of die Ulobe, it is pretty generally known. has made several heavy lieu on the rosnll of ihc coming elec tion. Some have Im'cii Hi n loss to lell how it hnpeiw that a man of his supposed Meanly sliimld lc willinR lo U-l iu surh a hopeless cne. The senior editor, Mr. Hlair, Intviii" gonr lo llie counlry, ihe Junior lul.es oceasion lo unlaisom himself very frankly, under his own proper uanic. The following is a Mittionof three rolumn nrlicle; I think it tinnier for ine lo slnle here Dial I tin re not made a Im-i lor niyt-ll lor several years ast ; and thai il is my intention never lo receive a single rent that may he Won on a hel, ifionch I may ronirihule to pay Ix-ts made hy me for other persons nil elections. I am opposeti io iH-iunji. ea-eMiiy surh sums as those wlm make the Ih Is Hre unahle to hm- hut I am still nvrc optioed lo seems; lht snrrt-ss of the le-moeratir parly mil iu p upardv hy die Wlntrs pronisiinr Ms wlnrh, if not tnarn. wdl induce those who " hale a minority " to go to them. 1 am indebted lo tlie democratic parly fur allor vurv nearly a I the money 1 am worth and I hum and belie i c 1 w.ll end as nmrli for il, in promrtion lo my miMiis, as anv "dier man. Though I will not irm money lo inmre ils sur'ress, I Will lose, or spi ild, thousands mill TkNS tir Tlloifs.iii, to prevent its deli'St. " If any Wlnu; shall think, from what I have said, dial I think he will win Ihe money whirls I slnki-d against hu, lie will lie vsrcftiotitly mistaken. I confidently cerl Io win, lor llio person tor wlnun I hel, nine-tenth of the money I have put up, who h will esreed ten thousand ddllars, " As I desou iti keep iioilnuit; hark m relation lo die ImM I have made, I will here slate llil all of them are for my partner, Fratiris I. Hlair, who is iu llie roo.itrj to-dny t bill I make free lo name him, tH-beVintr that heile-ires no concealment about die matter. From what he has said In me, 1 believe his prineiiMl ol'jret in bet tins; is lo Hop lite hrawiiiK of the Whisrs, which he ihinks will srnre Ihe timid who are on lliu fenrs, uud induce ll i lo lull ou ihe Wilis; side " Here, then, we have (ho whole secret disclosed, whether intentionally of otherwise. As Ihe editors of the (ihihe have become immensely rich through the kindness and muiiilirewc of llio Loroforo pnriv, ihey leel hound lo show their pairmi. ism b) tacrticing a little. The money ihuy hel, is so much, (if the aliove means any thin? at all,) sacrificed in order to keep up apearaiices ami prevent llioir followers from ginns; over laidily lo iho Whirs, The middle paragraph is put in as a sort of saving elmiso, lo prevent tho condition from having a disRstrtHis elfect hut wo cannot resist Iho belief that the article was written and puhlidicd in order to save Ilia money of die Incoforns, by preventing lliem from betting too freely on trie tuptot'd opinions and cm6'Wc of Iho editors of the (ilolw. Observe particularly tho closing sentence of the junior editor, in speaking of Ihe seitiot, fur whom ho has heflii making Ms and not for himself" From what hu has said In me, I believe his prim-ip d object in belling is to ttoptht bracing of the Wliigi, which lm thinks wdl si'AHK THK ti w i it, who a nr. os thk rim r., aish iniiuis tiiim t f-At.l. on thr wiiiu siiiK " That's rich lee idedly Thooe who have been in ihc dark, ran now see, hy a confession from Ilia very head riinrlen of all lint loeofocoism of the land, the lencdi and breadth, heighth and depth of Inroloro faith, Thev can imders'nnd the secret rauo of the heavy -,nj w ith w inch our Ohm l.ocoloros orrasioinilU steel us. Thi'V can understand whvarertain three IniU-d bashaw of locoWnism in tins city, who does up tlie work of ihe (il he for Ohio, and who owes a 'cry heavy dehl ol gralilude lo 'the piUtu," brags so hard, and (vc.iirnai. in s trvintf emergeney, n gloomy hour is so ready lo make a bet lot which he could ohiaui a lhounnd bidders! The less know-nig ones of loeofoeoism dumld leant prudent from whal we have copied from the (ilolw, and not go too diploave the nerves ol ihi " ImiJ," lur whom so much olitituJ is kit. Are Ihrr net fsnllr alnnderslf We do not know when we h ive wilnesseil any thing more unprovoked and uiijuililiuble than Uw assault on llie poor but vidimus girls of iho i ai torim, fapku mills, Air., mado by Ot ivctt JoJits, lite loroforo candidate for tin Btalr rten- ale in llie Hamilton district, In wltiefi ni.usion is mane in itir following albdavil, which we copy from ihe ( iK-umali Allns. If ihe fathers nnd brothers of these females do nut resent die mlijinily and slander, they arc not worthy to be railed men. Whal mockery to call such men as Oliver Jones, drmoerutt when to accomplish iheir unholy piifwc and secure Ihe spoils of victory, ihey would blast llic reputation uf ihe poor laboring girls, or Iho counlry and bring reproach on thnl very la-hor ilsclf, by identifying il with the infamous and vile. Mr. Niles, whose statement is given, is a man ot uiioouhtcu cftrt itnlity aud respectability: Hi a to mm i uf Solomon L. Nh.ls J cerlifv hat I heard Oliver Jour say. in Ihe course of a pnli lie sjieerh which lai ninde in ihe seliool house ol ihe lliirtl iliNinel in l idumi.ia lowasinp. ini n;iic wn oi u-n n on: i.u lory guls, or operamcs, at Lowell, were si ronil only to llie Ol'llillCS Ol (HirOllWHJ nooses. I1U ri.mi.nm.n-M mi iiir Ht t'v LdwHrd l. Monroe, a worthy democrat, wtm told Mr. Jones lh.il lie had lived in Ihe nc'chltorhond of Irfiwrll, and km w Ihal he was m st.iken, and hrtdlxTiimiinlorined. as lo die moral character of tlie females nl that plarei dial ttic leniiih-s of the niniiufacliirmg establishments ot Lowell wrre as correct iu their deporfm-ul and as much in pec led as any hu w as eer acipiainled with. Mr. Jon'"S. however, persevered iu his assert maintaining thai a large portion of them were as he rrpresenicd iIh-iii. I le said In okc from Imlory and what ho knew of them in similar establishments surh us paKT mills in thmrounlv. I give itiesul-sinnrculhts remarks, aud.uear as I can recoiled, his very wonls. SOLOMON L. NILES. ITT Tho following from Mr. Clay's speech on the Tariff, shows his opinion of die factory and null girls: t will now givo ycai Ihe declaration of Mr. Clay about Ihe rhftrnrlert ol those lemales wlm work in those inNiiulactorirs in the North. Mr. ('lav in his speech on ihe land, delivrwt in the House of ltepreentativei, April I H.U. while srak-ins; on the sul'jrcl nl ein:c ralion, made tlw following remarks women aiid rlnldien who could not nugraie.aml would ho comparative 1 idle if manulaclofSfs did nol ensl. may lr profitably cmploved in ihem. This is a very great henrlil. I witnessed the advantages resolluig from the employment of this description ol our potmlalion, m a vtsii wiorn i wieiy inadr loihe Wnhham maimlarlory near llosion. Tlwrcsome hundreds of girls ami boy were occupied in separate apart- incuts. The greatesl outer, neaiiass. aim apparein romion reigoiil ihrmiglMMit Ihe wIhiIc eslsl-lidiiiient. l lie danghlrrs r nominliln I m mi era I in mm instance I rrincmher tho daughter of n Senator in lite Stale Legidatore) were usefully employed. I hey would come down to ine ninmuactory, re-main Hrhnps soiiio monllr. and reinni with llietr rnrninirs lo iheir families lo assist them ihroiiiiMtl the year. Hul one instance had occurred, I was informed by tho inlelligi-nl mnun-ger, of doubtful rtmdnci nu die part of any of ihe females, and after ht was divmiised there was rcaiuu lo believe that injustice had lieen done M." la no i n A good Whig on Alum creek, sent t Iwo largo potatoes, a few days linre, as a sprrimiu of ihc productions of his farm. Old Hlinrou ilwill Ih) set n, lakes tin lead, as lm is worthy to do, and eclipse all her sMers in Iho production of potalues, as she is wont to do in her lug majorities: WoHTIIIMOTO!s,8epl.;VI. Illll. Ed it ori of O. S. Journal: lit is n.i mo; "Old S liar on" is tun) io Ih uI in ils majoniy of true V higs, as yai knowi nud you will jierremi by ihe seriiiieii I send )ou, thai she islmrd to Mil in llio sue nl lu r sweet potatoes. The one sent weighed .f lbs. U os. llie day it wns ilug Irom thu "Clay" sod on wIikIi it giew, with hnnlly onimary ruunaiioti, lours, we. rged la'fotc the Scnaie upon krrt of falte protnitu, and tiese trim in ii, ns vieu were inn tellers no ol eoon-sk proven lo be totally Jtlie antt banners , when such great uufiamUd, They were raised iueitioits are nl slake. 1 fence alone tor lliu purpose ol ilc- jlliey are in all rpiariers turn-cctvrugthu people ns In tho ine; to the mom meet of the real ol-jert, and nol a title of Conrentimat ilalttmore, ami vioence was aniliireilloshow lorevcr ouiitiur all Conner- that Knglaml whs desirous of 'lion, iKihlicallv, wilh a oarir getting posiession of Tesas, ihat ran bring nothing but at wns the least degrw exerl- danger lo the reHlhic by their ing uerseii io accompusn uiai success. u urn. "On lite enntrarv, there were dittinet tjlicitt tlitarme-menta of auwturh with on the part oj Great llritain; aud so near ami ronriusivu was ihn, that Mr. I'allioun, iIhi istTrelarvof !inie,wlio tnntle ihe Treaty, did not dare to place it bulorr Ihc Senate upon these gnmiids. I lie rcur oiui-et in annex ation was INK I'KUI'r, I D AHO N AMI KXTLN- SH IN OFHLAVF.lt V, and of lie I'OLI I It'AL f'OWKK f ihe bLAVK STA I LS : I'lns was ihe ground uixin which the Treaty was placed More the Seiu.te. Tlie Av- tmoms of the treaty desired to see si,Avt.nr perpetuated in ihn Souih. TIILY UK SIKLIl TO K F, K Til K SLAVF. HOl.lllMi INTK- KF.ST MOKF. I'OWKK-FI LLV H KI'ltKSLN TKI) IN CONliKKSS. Theywiih-td to get the controlling idu-cure in the council! of OuNation." TANT in us to ert a little to make up fur it in the louth- weit r "Thev are not williur A sKtosii Ti m k lo trust Me md- f Slav Cfl. was the date of tho lri-erkly Hlatesmaii, l nose who lake Ihe weeklv. will prohnbly hud thu article in tho paitcr published oth June. So of June llii the ronients of this date wcrr probably rarried over to the Weekly or the Sri Jul. We are thus particular, because wo have rr reived Irllers or nepury on Ihe subject. Obeylnsj OrHrre, mw The Pnrlf Leelttng-CJInn, rroin llie Ohio Sialesman, Ibxtrart of a letter from (len. Tlu great, tsr-seeing stales- Jai it son, lUlerl June H: man has won golden opinions ' Texas is ihe key to our by his Texas letter. Kvrry .safclv from Itrttith influence body is admiring and eulogi-laud llriholi invasion. I snv xing it. Ertn hit enrmiet arrrpt ber hand while she knvck nndrr. IT will wis holds it out to us, and shut ihe him livi: TlluusAHU votes -iiimr airauisl all lulure danger, U Ofllo!" rernrdlett of comrquencei. From ihe Albany Arris. ' No one could regret, more .Mk. as ItuHRfi us AasKX- than I did. tho position in ation oi- I t.xxn. (which Mr. Van Ituren plareil ss e iiuonsn io-oht air. v nn iiumseii or nis iriier on the Huron's teller on this deeply .ami? nation uf Tesas. Had interesting imcsimn. Long 'he come ont for immxhiatk as il is. il will richly repay an annexation, he would hnve pREAcitipto Politics on Nunday. The notable example of CJernlt Sriitth, of New York, in preaching politics of tho Abolitioiistauip on Sundays, is being lb) lowed iu this county. An elderly, reliffious, and in maiiy respects wor-tJiy man, of Brooklyn, but who is mainly occupied in a crusade against slavery iu general, and Whipisin in particular, called a meeting at the usiml place of holding religious exercises, in I'nruia, last Sundny evening, for the purpose of delivering as wns suppoa-cd,aleLnlimate anti-slavery addross. This he com-menced doino;, but prcttly soon bc;an to direct his artillery against Mr. Clay exclusively, and said all the hard things about him tlmt he could think of. But not a word was lisped about Mr. Polk, and for aught his auditors hoard front the speaker, they would noiwtvo supposed that there were any candidates lor the Presidency but Mr. Clay nnd Mr. Dirney. He besought them to vote lor JJirnev tins time, and it they thought four years hence it was nol then best to vote for an abolition cnndidite, vote fur some other. Try it this once and see if their consciences would nut bo the more quicL Cleveland Herald 91 c' a I In the Stnndrrcr. Wo learn from the Louisville Journal that Gen. McCalla tlie Locofoco candidate for elector, in tho Lexington (Ky.) District, aud rvho lias been busy in slunderinjf Mr. Clay, by preferring charges of gam bling, and other immoralities, ngnuist him, Isteiy applied to tho first Presbyterian Church in Lexington. of which he was an elder, fur a cortificatu of good mural clmracter, winch the session unhesitiitingly refused ! To avoid expulsion he withdrew from ihe church. No wonder the Locofoco use lum as a manufac turer of slanders against Mr. Clay. Ho is exactly the rigid sort of a scamp fur Hint business. Xenia i arch Lght. Old ftishismrd Whig Krohillen. Mr. Comstock. an old Kcvolutiouor of Burlington township, informs us that three little girls, living near him, aged from ten to twelvo years, one a 1 ait Lr liter of a widowed lady, named UucK. went into Ihe woods and cut a very pretty ash some forty feet in length and nearly eighteen inches in circumference, which they removed unassisted to the house uf Mrs. Duck, where they raised it with a little assistance. A ling now flouts very prettily from its top. There ts Whig resolution and energy for you worthy of 7G!! attentive perusal. Il is MintroiiiAii like production. received the unanimous vote of the convention ns a candi date for the Presidency, and wouin nave ueen elected uy mo rtoiim ami mo est y aC' rlmnniion." Then let INilk. Dallas am! Texas he the watchword nnd marked by that far reaching sagacity ami comprehensive judgment so eminently rhar artct islir ol Mr. an Huren s Stale paHari. I he ooesliou is disrupted in all ill ben r ine s, nnd his clear mind presents rotinicnien. and ('lav ami every point distinctly Itelore bis friend Frduighiiysvii, llie ine American people, r.rery menu atso ol Hlroliliom Amtnean reaJer, not enUrelu 'tor which he spurns at I uxns under the dominion of preju- wtl be arerwhelm'd by th awe, win atuni ine jortt oj m unanimottirvtceottie autun. conclmtiona. From the Ohio Statesman. Sept. 4, I (HI. "Ot II VI. AU SJ TIIICHK. "Tho i.osr Star or Tnii-inscription FOLK, DALLAS, ami Too.'1 OLD. TAVI.OIt. Thk Lisokst ykt. From our friend Dr. II. F.tiAKh, of Hurrison l., I'irkawny co., we have receivcl, as a speci- mm of his crop, four Mammoth Sweel Put it toes, the largest of which weighs full fair pounds, and measures I I inches in length ami U iucIh-s in circiimtervnee. Tim others weigh 3 lbs. each, making the weight of the tour thirteen imunds. Dr. ii. says hcercived dm seed rccenil from Kenlueky, and he thinks llwy may bo appropriately called Clay po.iot. Ho has some of the seed lo spare, ami he Ihinks before Franklin ran go ahead, she must try them. Who nrc hie Accicrnf Tlie ltorltestrr Democrat well says; 'F.very day we bear druuknnU, gamblers, adulterers, seducers, and horse thieves, flowing against llK!a (XAY as a ikltauchee aud sensu alist. And die oilier night, in a put. lie meeting where a man presided who is notorious as a seducer, and w here men acted u c Inch masters who ore now under arrest lor attempt to com-nit a raje. With tho records Ik-lore us and after an ample examination iif all the farts, we affirm, without tear of contradiction, that James K. Folk tvrcr cusi rote inaeor of the Cumberland Road! l.rl il he reinrtnlcrcd hy every voter of Ohio, and every man capable of estimating the importance of (his grea National thoroughfare, thai while n monument stands near the rond testifying to llio milinug ilToiis or Mr. Clay In bchulf of the woik, Mr. Folk's name Hinds rrrordrri in tho ar-cluvoa uf da) country, ns ils steadfast, umform enemy!! Nrui llt'isisi The election in Marylautltook place yesterday. Look out for mote Wing Thuudrr. An artivid from Menco ml vises us of tho destruction of Malamoras, by a hurrieauo. Il occurred on the -tlh Sept. Iwo hundred lives were lost, and lite greatest still snug prevails.The papers cnufirm the report about the rnblcry of (lov Shannon, on his way lioin Vera Cms to Mexico. John (luiucy Ariuim addresses tho Huston L'lay Clubs next Monday. The N- Y. Express uf Thursday says: Frwin VI ftf ! lliindrcst Thoiisrtnsl U'hlv iat C'enncll We copy from Iho Cincinnati Athtr tho fidlowing notico uf tho greatest gathering but ono ever held iu the West: TUB LINE KNCAMPMKNT. Wo learn from several persons who were pre sent, that tho Mass Meeting of the Whigs on tho boundary line of Ohio and Indiana, Inst rndnv and Saturday, was thronged by immense hosts of Whigs trom both Ntatcs. The nmunera present were van oualy estimated by good fudges at !H 1.0(H) to 1(H),-(HHJ. Tho tonts flxtcuded for a distance of near! a mile in length, hy half a mile in bnadih; ono of which was H-0 leut lung; another 1 KMeeLtne Hands of Music hnd ft tent especially devoted to their use, which was HHJ Icet long, and there were many outers from 0 to UK) feet hi length. There were a largo number of oxcollont Speakers presold, from Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana, and so great wns the throng, that five dilVercnt stands were erected, Irom which as many uiiieroui speak ers addressed the multitude at once. Amongst tho sneakers were (iuv. Mi:tcai.i O. IL Smith, liov. INiiNiiKvrrit, K. C. Ki iii sca, wm. l hittkhpi: Calhh II Smith, lien. Ukli- Vm. hkbb, Uev. Aa Tiim Kli.iott, Hawkihs of la. Hawkins of 0 C. F. Dkmpsry of Darko Cos, Jons Woun, Jab. IUm- nr.n. L. I). Campbfi.l. and many others, I loci ilea (ho speaking at the Kucatupmont, there were largo nirelinga nl llie contiguous uiwusiups ot Pane and Kudtinoiid, both of which places) wnro full The pm port ton present (mm Indiana, The Clnnnmett Tree. Mr. Cusiimu, our Minister to China, in an account of the island of Ceylon makes tho following state ments recocting the nature and cultivation ot the Cinnamon true. First, as lo evmamon culture. 1 he production in its perfect state is almost a monopoly of tho Island of Ceylon, and its growth is confined to ft very narrow tract of land on the southwest side of the is land, chiefly in the neighborhood of Culomo, This docs not seem to be tho result of political arrange ment merely, but to arise trom soma inappreciable virtue in the combination of climate, soil, and water, and their relation to each other, in this Island of Ceylon, and in this part of it Some of these peculiarities it is eimy to indicate without it being so easy to understand why tho particular consequence should follow. Tho tract of country in which alone the cinnamon grows to perfection, is situated on tho scacoast exposed to the air ot the ocean. It ii in a climato of equable temperature, which is at once hut and moist hot from ils tropical position, and moist from the frequency and plentifuluess of rnins. The gen-crnl level of the country is low in tho midst of Irosh water lakes, divided from the sea by a narrow riband of land. And tho water in tho soil of the cinnamon gardens is of extraordinary purity, so as to bo fur that reason much in request in tho neighboring cily as a beverage. This exact combination of influences does not occur any where else in Iho island, at least not in tho same degree. Hut the crowning fact is in the nntnre of tho soil. It is in great nnrt pure quartz sand of a greyish to ft pearly white lustre. A specimen of it being carefully dried by Dr. Davy was found to consixl of yp',5 silicious sand, 0,5 vegetable matter and 1 water. This circumstance impresses one very strongly on visiting the cinnamon gardens, it seems so straiiL'O to sco a plain of pure quartz aand whitened in the sun, and covered over with luxuriant growth of tree. In richer soils the aroma is aaid not to develop itself iu the samo concentrated form. Perhaps tho name of garden, which is applied to the cinnamon plantations, may lend to an erroneous conception of their nature. The cinnamon tree taunts cifinmnomtim,) in its natural stato grows to the lieielit ot about twenty teet. but the tiarK, wmcn is tho only valuable part, is found to looso much uf its hitmly amniotic quality in the maturo ireo. ac cordingly, the trees aro cut young, when the steins are only five or six feet long, and less than an inch thick at tho largest end. The bark is then stripped or nceled off in lornr nieces like willow bnrk, scra ped carefully to remove the cuticle, and laid out to dry, during winch it turns up in quills, as they aro ca led. and it is then ready lor tlio market, out im proves by keeping for a while. Tho wood is good tor nothing but fuel. Uwmg to the mode ol cnlii valion, this cinunmon garden has very much the an pearanco of scrub oak, the rich bright green leave ot the small trees being strikingly in contrast tho while plain in which tht-y grow It is possible that the Iragrnuco ol thr cinnnmnn The Frcdi-cewsen of ihc II a mass It sice. An arncle in the ferst number of the North British Review has recent it appeared, ascribed to Dr. Pyo mi I in. ii urings eeiure us some stnkinil facta and solemn reasoning on the various creations which philosophers suppose to have preceded the formation of umn. Tlte doctor refers to the memoir read by. Cuvior in 171HJ, at tho first sitting of tho National Institute, w On the species of fossil Elephants, compa red with Living Species," in which hu demonstrates that the fossil elephant di tiers from all living species, and that it is an extinct species, now lost. Ho undertook to prove ttie like with respect to other animals. "May we ask," said ho, "why we find so muny remains ol unknown animals, whilst we can find none which we can raqk among tho species which we know We ixav see how probable it is that they have all belonged to the beings of a world anterior to ours to beings destroyed by revolutions of the earth, and to beings which have been replaced by existing species." Surrounded by the ej-iiife ol former creations, tlio lank assigned to Cuvier, the article goea on to stale, wus to restore the trun-mentB to their former positions. Uy great labor, ho succeeded in trucing their connection, and re-established lfiti vertebral animals, which form fifty distinct genera, of which fifteen are entirely now; and reckoning the additions which nave since ueen made, there is reason to believe that the species of extinct animals are more numerous than the living ones. lltit Luvier tound tlmt the differences ot structure between fossil and recent animals increase with the age of the deposit in which the former are found, and that these differences mnrk the age of the depos its themselves. As tho primitive rocks exhibit no traces of plants or animals, he concluded that theru was a time when no living beings existed upon the earth ; and that, before tlie creation of man, the world was inhabited by at least three ditlerent generations uf animals, which had been successively created and destroyed. It is supposed with reason, if the subject bo not too grand for our fecblo reason, that the creation of vegetable bodies preceded the crention of the animals that wore to devour them. The stately pine, lite gigantic equtsesactc, and the lofty palm, waveu in tlte primeval toresls, and the sea and ttic laud wero inhabited only by a small number of the marine mammalia, and scarcely any of the tcrrestial mammalia. Wc then arrive at this startling conclusion, that among the earliest inhabitants of tho globe were reptiles of enormous magnitude, the Megalosaurus, being upwards of seventy feet long ; the Ichthyosnu- ' rus, above thirty feet in length ; the Plesiosaurus, un animal combining' tho trunk of an ordinary quadruped, with ft itcck like the body of a serpent, tho hcud of a lizard, the teeth of ft crocodile, and the paddles of a whale; and the Pterodactyle, the most extraordinary of extinct animals uniting the character of a bird, a bat, a reptile, aud ft qundruped ! In the Bee ond period the terrestial mammalia increase in number, and we have along with them Humorous Pachydermnta or animals with thick skins, such as the Paleothcrium and Aiiopclotherium, and other genera of aquatic animals, which dwelt on the margin of lakes and rivers. In the first of thesu extinct genera, the species vary in size, from tho Rhinoceros to tho hog. These and other species, nearly fifty in number, were discovered by Cuvier in the fresh water formations of Muntmartre neur Paris. In the third period lived the Mammoth, tho Mas todon, the HipjtopotamiiH, and those huge Sloths, tl o Megatherium and the Megalonyx, tho giants ot tlio natural world, tho grandest and tho last specimer.sj of that extraordinary population over which man never swayed the sceptre. The lion and the tiger aro supposed to be the successors of the creatures lust mentioned. Up to this stage, no traces of man or of his labors, can be detected, and this gives the remarkable result that the three periods have been succeeded by a fourth, in which the Almighty placed man upon tlie earth, find created, as his subjects and his servants, those races of living beings which occupy the surface of our globe, and inhabit the depths of ils oceans. Referring to the Mosaic record of the creation, tho article to which we have referred comes to this conclusion: "The records of faith now stand on the same level with tlie records of reason. Truth, brought down from on liifh, harmonizes with truiii from below; and tlio Christian who refused to surrender his cherished volume to tho taunts of reason, now holds it with a firmer grasp, and scans the series of creations which Science has revealed, but us the harbinger of that latest exercise of divine power which gavo birth to man, and placed him over ft new animal world. "But the confirmation of tho Mosaic account of the creation is not tho oulv, or even tho chief result of geological discovery. T"he commencement of organic life in plants and animals of the first period, and its higher and progressive development in dit lerent orders, lends us back to that beginning whicli was so long veiled from human reason; while tho successive destruction of successive ci eat ion carries us forward to the terminus of our own period to that 'day of the Lord, when the heavens tdiall pasa away with a great noise, and ihc elements ehull unit with a fervent heat, and tho earth also, and the works which are therein, shall he burned up." The omnipotent nmy have designs to work out, of which we and all we behold are but the preliminary instruments. To us, it is possible, commanding bo ngs will succeed, as different from us as Ihe lion is from tho megalosaurus, more superior to us than wo are to the monkey. We need say nothing to hx tho readers mind on tho reflections which follow : "Should this, apparently last period of animal life. be ono in which man is to exercise his faculties lit the invci titration of his Maker's works, tho fossil ne ology of tho world we now inhabit will exhibit de posits no less interesting than thoso winch embosom the gigantic framowork of mammoths and mastodons. How interesting will bo the excavations in which the buried cities of modern Kurope will re-apnear in - iheir ruined grandeur; how strangoiho discovery of submerged navies embalmed in iheir ocean beds; or tho founderod ship with its imprisoned skeletons; or the battle field, with its prostrate warriors ; or tho hallowed cemetery, crowded with the relics ot ynulli and ape, and crushed beneath their tablets of marble, and their monuments ofbronzol' of iMionle. was very large, double the number of Ohio, Many I univr may have been sensible to voyagers along iho came from r dislam-e of 100 miles. Our informants . C((li 0f Ceylon; but I do not believe that it often stato that tho iiunihrr of Luliea present out numbered any thing of the kind they overwittiittssed; some estimated thorn as high ns 10,000; thcro were W large vehicles, each of which contained UO ladies with banners, and drawn by 10 oxen, some of which camo 50 miles. There were 500 delegates present from Indianapolis, and tho whole linn of counties on tho Wabash, besides all on the J distent part uf tlte atato, were well represented. Keep It before Ihe People Extract from Mr. Clay's Spepc.h in tho Senate, 23rd niarcn, mr-L "Tho Senator (Mr. Calhoun.1 was coMinunllv charging him (Mr. Clay) with tho design of violating the compromise act ! When had he swerved from it? He was still tor adhering to it. as lie understood itx principles. Those principles he did nol consider in- otnpattbie witu the protection ot American industry. in preference to any other. 1 Io bud lived, ami would ilie, an advocate ol the protective system, Hu hnd never changed his principle. They were now tho same as they had ever been; but he submitted to the restrictions of the compromise act as a inn tier of necessity. And he did not even now think it prudent, because not practicable, to go as far as his inclinations led him, with tho friends of protection. Hut as far as ho could go ho would !" Tho Pensacola Gazette, speakinir of tho arrival at Vera Crui of the lion. Wilson Shannon, out Minis ter lo Mexico, says : in the reception of Mr. S. by the authorities of Vera Cruz thero was nothing indicative of ill-feeliuf towards our country. On tho contrary, bo was treat ed with the ceremony and honors due to his charac ter as Lnvoy irom a great people." Wmo SrintT is Maim:. A second trial to elect Members of the Legislature was made inl Portland on Monday laat. iho romilt was as follows. lvnies. Locotocos. s Fesacndcn 11(10 1 1 olden Names 1KU Staples , .VLswfTj Chadwick ll'ili Todd . lOUJ Scattering Oil-Whole Whig ticlftl elected. In HVnilon, Pcpl. Hi, by liir Kev. IN. Emery, Mr. Aaron Kl Ml', to Ml SI M AltO IK t:T TilF, Hy the same, in Omnire, Delaware co., dept. 25, Mr. Jahm I'ook, io Mi Ma mi a Pattviison. Itv llie sHitie, In llloiidon, 8cpl. lo, Mr. JoliR Unas, to Miss I'uttntt k P. tlM.HYtlN. linppnit; no am Ii fact wm pwoiVBt! on bonrcl llio llrnuilyniiio. 'J'horu in vnry lilllo of llns fini-niico ncrccntihle in tlio irnnlcn tliom.ulvci1: niul tlio idea of ila oxlomling nut lo ion ii Isuliod Mill Colombo, John Qitim'y Ailuma lina cniwntcil In deliver a loctnre on Mondny cvciiii.p, tho 7th nf Orlulwr next, nl tin Triniont Tcmplr, huloro the Uiwlou L'lny Cluba. Off hi. n i IXeil, on tlie Glti Srpl., iicnr Akion, on hi wnv Imm. to Tnniilmll ro.,JANit. Mrt'oxBi, lur icwrul jenn n .ti,il uf llit- Ohio ln.uimmti for tlie llliml. Tlii. ainiutilu ami cxi'iiifitary yming mnti w. mnrh cn iI.-uh.kI In llu- Icnrlicn anil pupil., anil nil ulhi-r. wilh .-hum ho ul tiqiininlnl. Ho nn. .I.o a Initial..! ami rmiM.lrnl member f Iho In I'ro.li) lonnn Cliutth in I'.iliimhn; al nit i-jin. be aa a enminul nlVcnilmil on il. trmrin. Ho . lalru irk wliilo on n l,-,r lour wuh ih,, Nnjienim-mloiil nml .eveial pupil, in Au,o.l, ami though evciy ii.iMl- auoii- " l""u "", " rantlly .un. muter llio ullocl bulon. he coulil reach hi. lalher'. lunno. Ib-luro Iho nler ol lliu pjrteil from him, he ,vo ihe moil clieerim evidence, ol .ellgroiiniM hope, and wn have reason lo Iru.t Ihnt tin i. I" -nnilleil to In-hnM uh uurlonilnl eve.. Iln.ir Kluii-S viliirh iu llii lite ue Inn laimj, revealed io tin uienlnl vi. ion. Cum. ij

WEEKLY 0 STATE VOLUME XXXV. COLUMBUS, AVEDNESDAY; OC TOBER 9, 1844. NUMBER 9. I'WH.ISHKU EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING, BY CHARLES SCOTT & CO, Office coruur of Hifiti and Town streets, Bullies' Building. TERMS: Two Irn.l.AHH pkr annum, wlticti mml Invariably I pnid in advniicu, freo uf postage, or of wt ceiitnge w Jiguw or Culler torn. , r The Journal is also published tidily tlurmc llw session or Ihc l.cjiisliiiurs i unci thrirc a wcwk tin- rcumHtder ol die year for 5; and lliro limm a week, yerjy, for THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOHKR H, 1844. C lnjr Club ITlmiiitf. The meeting of the Clay Club, on Tussday evening, wai well ailcndoil. Gen. lliiiion, of Delaware, who wax cspcr-tcd. did not roach iho citv. A few remarks were made by J. Tccsdale, at llie call of llic meeting, after which one of the best addresses of the icasuti wns delivered ly Mr. MTAN-BKRY, of Lancaster, who wns culled out by a committee appointed for lite purpose. The question of annexation was pxumincd in all il bearing, and the momentous consequences that must ensue if the. schemes of llio Aimesatiomsls arcsuc-nssfol. worn denieted most vividly nud faithfully. Tho thanks of ihc Club aro due to Mr. 8. l.om:'I be hiss nii:: The locofoco majore of our city, after having circulated handbills in every direction, found it necessary, in order to prevent a complete failure, to send out the bellman, and a squad of horsemen, U hunt up ami ring out ineir uesponoing followers, to hoar ait address at the mnrkcl homo, from Judge Tallmadgo of lat evening. Like Jehu they rode through the l recti, filling the air with (heir dismal cries, and startling front their kcnnclj a breod of eurs about ni noisy as themselves. After such unwonted efforts, unlike anything ever below witnessed in our quiet city, they succeeded in gathering but a slim crowd, who, accordiug to all arcounts, felt themselves but poorly paid for their trouble. We think die effort of Mr. T. will not recommend him very strongly as an aspirant after a seal on the Bench of tho Supreme Court. . A Miserable Abortion, A shameless attempt is made in the lint Suleiman by some reckless lalsilier, (wlm insults thu rliurcb and cutis reproach on its fair fame, by pretending to speak for "twenty-eight Methodiitt,") to traduce llie character of Mr. Clay. The idea of passing off such wholesale fabrieatiaiu a the productions of "Methodists," is mi supremely ridiculous nnd infamous as lo be unworthy of serious notice. The abandoned character of the production and iu author may lie judged from the following charge delibcrulely made against Mr. Clay, without the slightest foundation in truth, as every child of ten years know: "We 'know' thai dm man whom you herald to the world BHonu of indexible and 'accredited' virhio, has twice stood forth on Hie lield of blood lo uphold that 'rodo of honor ...f.... ii... !iai ,. i' I l.wl hikI mail. slioolinr. in cold blood, one nnlHgoiiisl, and despemlely wouialmg the other." The crowning infamy oi the whole, is the attempt to puss il off as the production of MTifr'.' To enmpkie die work and make il a little more plausible, numcs shuuld bo copied front the toinb-atonet and annexed to it. (.TIiiiaiir T0111011 conic ngiilii." The Statesman bus g"t out that ntd Hit of stmighlouts once more, inchiduig one man fiVud sonir- lime since another (N. P. Tullmadge) who is a good a Whig os he evrr wnsj end others, such as Hon. Wugcr Weldcn, wlai uevcr were Whigs. Hard mil, thnl. If Ins mrfflnK In IminpaJllii We leant from IheVJrbaua Ciliicn, dial the meeting in dial place on the 'tli uli.f was the largest over before convened there. Gen. Anthony and Gen. Mason were die speakers, end made effective efforts. Tho bent spirit prcvuiled, and Champaign, ever true, will do her whole duly. Abort Pnrnrha for cnliss com Idem I Ion. F.VEIIY MAN who thinks we should idj"W Great Hritain to do our manufacturing, furnish all wo w,-:,t, and drain our country of il money to pay for the same, will cast his vote for die locofoco ticket next Tuesday. K.vKttv MAN who thinks wo should open our ports lo Great Britain, and receive the proceeds of her pauper labor free of duty, while she imposes duties almost prohibitory on every thing we produce, will vole llio irceirnuc, naru-niunvy iw and Texas ticket next Tcday. I EvKitr man who thinks we should allow Uridyl Moim(o. lists lo break ilowii our own manufactories, prolralo Amiri-ran l.jdnir, and ihus drive mcc hanics and lalairers to the nil-" livalion of the soil, in order lo provide their own bread, will vole the locofoco ticket next Tuesday and on the 1st day of November. Evkky man who think there is not coinclilion enough in the production of Grain, &.u. in this couulry, and ibmwu had heller raise more, while altlie sanm time wn dmnmh ihc df tHiwl and ilestroy Ihe principal market we now poscs for the consumption of oursurplu produce, will vole, I'olk, Tml, Hlone, McNnlly nnd ull Iho other enemies of Ihe Tariff. Evmiy MAN who thinks that Washington, Jefferson, Mad. ison, and all the other lathers of the Republic, were not nc-.maimed with the true intervals and real policy of the coun try, when they urged so strenuously die piottctiou of Amtri-(iiii Indmtry, will how down ami wnrdiip lh new goiU set I tip by dm "priirfssiee drmocmnj," and cast wit those scl tip by Hie snges and patriot of those lime dial tried men's soul This Ihey wdl do by casting llieir ballots for Iho locofoco ticket next Tuesday. Evchy MAN who Ihinks dial a home market is as bad aa market, and thai Gen. Jarkou was wrong when he urged a more equal division of latmr, and tho taking of men from agricultural labor of nianuracluring, will record his IcmL moay ajaiiisl Protection, by casing his vole fr-r thu locofoco ticket Tueidny. E vr.it Y maw who thinks llnd our own lalmr should not be protected, that il should 1 placed on a fiHiling and in com-lition wilh Euntpean labor, and reduced lo die European Standard, will vote Ihe locofoco lickel next Tuesday. Evriiy MAN who thinks it bcllor to take Texas, "rcgnrd-less of consequences," lo pay her debt, more or less, fight her battles, and thus enrich speculators and shavers who hold her bomb, for the sake or lauds already deeded away two or three limes, as Mr. Itetilon declares, find lo give llio slave dwlderi of thai country a right to vote on theirslave-property, will voio the .Locofoco tiekol n al Tuesday, and from iIimi time forward. tivMtr man who thinks (hat Mr. Clay did not Fpeak as became a natriol and slHlesnian, when In derlerm! mat en would only coiiKiil to Auneialioii, when il could be done 'itilhoHt ttar, without dishonor, and with the tommmcowent of the Union," will vole the I.ocmo hckol next I utwiay. KvFRr man who Ihinks dial "Hank Reform" has condu ced lo ihe prosperity of Ihe Slate, that Hartley's nnli-Hank I.nw is lust sticlt a law at wo waul, ami tnai wo can oo oei ter wilh Ihe currency of the surnamding Stales Ihan wilh one of our own creation, within our own control, wdl vote for David TuH and llio l.orofoeo liekel. Evtttr man who iltMires thu uMnMiihmunt of die Sub- Trouumv with ill bolts, bars and leg -treasurers, will vole Ihe Lnrofoco lit kel. EvrnY man who think that honest Mardeeai ttartlftf, who liclM)d lo delend the verjf soil we now siaud npoii who ha liilcd many piU, and never betrayed a liml who h.u nearly all his blc tilled tho mil, and agaiiul whose character the vdeU daro nol lisp a charge, is unworthy or thu (iulwrna-lonal ('hair, and iucaKiMe or admitusleriug its duties honestly ami faithfully, will vote for lAirisf 2W, the time serving, o'llire-scekingrlemagoRueof Tmnihull cimmy. EvinY man who thinks thai Caleb J. McNully is a more honest, upright and moral eiliien, uud will more honorably represent thedistricl in tho counsels of llienaiou than Columbus IK-Iano, will not liiiatc lo cat his vote for him. KvaiiY MAN who opposes wing principles, and considers A. V. Stone abeiior Itrmocrat, nud abler man than James Htaiibcry, Jr., will undoiibtodly cast bis vole a-aisl the lalltr next Tuesday. H r The New York prs aro filled with a glowing ic count of Ihc greatesl meeting ever held in the rity, by any party. We have room only fir a brief paragraph, from Hie N. V. Tnbune: THE GRAND RALLY OF THE COMMERCIALEM-PltltlUM. The rrealest political im-elutg ever held within ihe cily of New Yrk assembled nn Thursday lat within auttnroumt fta-IUI1. Krom Hroa.bvav lo Centre street, (some fitly rods) ihe whole width of Cuiml street , (i rnd) was ocru- p.rl ly tho miwioor pan "-' ';:'-,'. hiKSMl mut have been in allrmlanre. rroin I EN I'll" i.i:im.'v i' M'l'lMtM t i!m same lime the ifvonle were ad- irr..,.it hv Garrett Havis. of Keuuirky, m. K. Homl, ol t)lno L. r'. Alien, of lluffnln, Hugh Matwrll, Hinlley Scl-len 'Joseph I. White, J. N. ReMiold.i. John C. Hamilton, H E lavi. Thomas Clirviinl. Geo. W. Hlnnl, J. H. Aik- u i-n. ..I l.l n. II. M. Whilnev. J. Towler. lr Hiid twenty or thirty nlhrr speakers were hrard some of .,M,ikers for ihe first time. We have doubtless omitted the names of some of tho ablest among Ihem, as il was impossible, wilh die aid of two reporters, to catch even the Ii nines of hair or ihem. The display of banners, torches, ic, was beyond all precedent. No ineetinir equal in iiu:h-bcrs'nr spirit, eer assembled iu lla-cily of New York. The principal stand wai creeled on the side of Canal Ireel. oppoiie l National H'dl. All immense- throng having gathered at this point, die meeting wn called to order at H o'clock by Edward Minium, V.m) , on whose motion it was oremmed b'v the nppoinimenl of ihe Honorable MOSES II. GiHNNEl.lL, as l'rujtdent, Id Vice Presidents, and il Sec- A dnVinrdly outrage was cnmmilted during the evening by the Kmptr .', b"'"1 nf pug'liis, bullies, gambler and pick-pnekets, wlto have (we blush for the country while we tell ii) been encouraged to form ihennelvcs into a political elnh. This l.neofoco club is comiiosed of the iniwl despcr- ale wretches of N. Y. City, one of whom was convicted or mi inlnmoiis nssaull uimhi a feiuule but a few days since, but pardoned by Gov. Uourk. An attack was mndu on tlw rear or the Whig procession, at three points, by these abandoned wretches. A numtw of banners were destroyed nud stolen, end a largo number of persons were injured by blows from " sltine-hol. clubs and knives. A drep feeling of indignation has horn excited among (he honest and virtuous eititens of New Yorki and a determination is expressed to resist such as attack thu next lime, iu a utftiiuf r that will be fiudl (Victory! Victory:! The !piliil of Troise Hueaka!!! A Whig JTIator nud Ovo ut Ward-!! We had Ihe pleasure a few days since, of recording the Whig victory in Louisiana, by which a Whig majority was gniued in the Senate of that Stale, where lasl winter u stood f tocofbeos to icrcn wings, and wo are now, uy sups mim the Nashville papers, placed in possession or n triumph on signal and encouraging in tho very rapilul of Tennessee, among Mr. Polk's wizhbori! The following. Irom me nawmo Whig, corroborated by the nanner, lells the cheering laic, and shows how Iho tide is selling: vit ruuv 7i NAiMivii.rr. Ac goes the no Hoi so a oca ibr- liiiite. CITY ELECTION WHIG MAYOR TEN OUT OP T W E I. V E WHIG A L D E R M E N, AND WHIG CONSTAHLE! The result of the municipal election to-day affords renewed assurnnce thai our good city is Whig to the com. Looking nt the exiraordinan iiillucuccti again! which wo have to bailie wilh Locofocoism, e have the vanity lo believe thai Nashville can marshal, whenever Hie occasion calls for it, thu truest Whig population in llie Union, and this duy's woik will excuse the presumption. , ..,., . , Oim Winn Mavoh, POWHATTAN W. MAXEY, IS RE-ELECTED BY !00 uiniority. Alilenuen. The Whigs having carried five mil of Ihe six Wnrds, elect TEN ALDERMEN out of the twelve that compose the Council! and in the Gth Word pushed hulh llio Loco candidates within two or three voles of a lie. The majority for the Whig Town Lonslnble is wu. Still Another Victory! We learn hy tho National Intelligencer, lhal an election held in East Harford. Connecticut, Inst week, resulted in Ihe election of tho Whig Assessors and llonrd of Relief, by mow than a hundred majority! For Ihree years pnl this lowu has been locofoco, excepting lat April, when ihe v lug Hep-rjsenlalives were chosen by less llmu twenty ninjority. Thus roll on (he ball, north and south. The Vnti of IlrilUh Uoltl. This question is exciting deservedly earnest attention. TVtere can be no earthly doubt hut that Hritiih money ii ttted in thit country to disseminate Free-trade doctrinei, with the dexign of influencing our EUctioni, Wo express this belief deliberately, and with a clear view ol Ihe tacts, llio noxi ouestion is who are die recipients, and who among us shall be held responsible for tins crime again! Amkhican interests! Shall we hold the great body of the miscalled ' D. mocratic" parly responsible I Hy no moans. Hut we have a right to siiinct nay, we cannot help suspecting Iho leaders of thai changeable cnmbiiiation or politicians who call themselves " Democrats " or being willing accessories, and, iu mnny instances, direct participants in lite unnatural fraud, Istctusc of two facts 1st, their entire change of front on this subject in ihc northern Stales within the last two years and, Silly, their inability to give any reason for tins change founded on erjte-rirttce connected wilh llio working of the Erce-lrade and Pro tective systems, or based on fact ancrling iho data on which the iwo theories rest, Tho opinions of the lenders of the Democratic" liariy. dclibcrnlely Ullered to-dny, are aban- doncd lo-mnnow, and no reason given for thu change other than that Ihe " parly " has " progressed " beyond its fornir position. And why changed f In this lies tho answer : llio relative tuloresls of Iho country have not changed llie policy foreign nations has not changed but m k have changed! And' what ha changed Ihem I Paiity iutorel, not public interest mo.hky, nol itrjrtimntt! Do wc mean In say that men have hud their pockets tilled witli gold as a orue i No, nol exHclly thai. Hut the leaders iu this movement, including Krec-irnde advocates, Nullifiers, nnd Speculators in Texan Scrip, have contrived to fasten on the parly their candidate, nnd then comes iu all Ihe iulluences which may bo iipHc,d lo lollow iu Iho (rain of such a combination, lo brilie some, to overawe others, nnd in all these operations party machinery is used, imposing on die weak and unsuspecting, and stimulating iho cupidity iff the mere parly hack and Under in politics. This would lai tolerubte, did il begin nud end with our domestic politics ( bul il slreli-hes into foreign lands iu authors seek alliances wilh foreign inlerests foreign money is used, and our elections become Ihe engines of foreign intlueiiees, by which men are placed in power to sustain aor-eign policy against a purely mrrinm policy. Lei the can did reader look at the fuels which lutvelieeti already nuuucea on this subject. And llieu let him ask himself who composo tho I'rec-lrnfle League in England from which spring this movement on our country I They arc Jtitmut Ma niji ac- TUitutts! And who arc their adjuncts m America i mo Slave dealer the Nullifier the Disunionisls of the planting Stales the advocates of Annexation! And arc the lenders oflhis combination lo be seriously called Democrats"! Hithey are Jacobins, Seclioiiisl ; and can clniin no affinity in principle wilh die fathers of ihc Demnerntic parly, as is shown by their abandonment of ull the ancient landmarks. They have ceased In lie Ihe advocates of American interests. They are but tho echoes of Arguments coined by Hrilish writers, and are acting in concert with Hrilish ngeulf. This combination of men who in Congress legislate for British Manufacturers, leaving our Farmers a prey to iho prohibitory eorndaws ol England have stationed al Wash ington a Committee lo publish and dissemminalc documents iu supKrl of their views. In Tract No. Ii, published by older of this Committee composed of " Democratic Members of Congress," nl page six, will bo found these passages : At a recent meeting nt the rrec I raup League, m-in at Manchester. sisl thousand dolliiM (prnrlwal proof ol sincerity that'.) were cohVeleil inn single day. Three hundred and titty Uwtuamt datt'tre nare oern suuwnnrn iu inr gnpurjnnu tint t"tMnH, alren.tii ; and ihe fiientte of that Auorintiim confidently atttrt that', " if Herniary, double the am-nnt trill be rained nt.tt year.'1 These vast Mint are expended indissein- uting cheap pamphlets, explaining mm eiimrcmg ttic ooc- truiesol tree-trade, l.asl venr, in in course m hi sitm, one million package, eacfi containing twelve shoil trocts, were gratuitously dilnbuied ihronyhntit tin-at Hrilnin. ltiu while Ihe Ineiids ol equal ngtits in r.ugiami are inns nobly waging battle ugaint the monopdy of their protectee njitem, we are cdh'd upon to foiter the miaitity they are din-carding; nnd as ihey chase the mighty monster from his den in the Old World, we are lo receive aiid pamper lum in tho rich fields and free forests of tho New !" Here is an acknowledged svmpaihy with the Hrilish Man ufacturer, iu their war against the industry of other nations. The movement in England is understood as being aimed at Ihe rising manufactories of Germany and llio Cin'ed Stale for, lei il l understood J ho rcinclivc policy nl England is mil directed at iheir own industry and Kree-lradc with them means, free lo go out for a market, bul not free lo come in lo England for one ! Tin is the difference between Free-trade in England and America. And we call iqani every inde pendent voter every mnn who love his country, anil means to sustain her interests against Iocs Irom without and h from within, lo look well lo these things, and beware lest he lends himself lo sustain a HttiTtsii party in America, wlun hi leatt intendt it. I.el cverr Aiuvricnu C'lllxeu ronl lb tlecortl m( Juuara K. 1'olU'- Irp li"rncr: We invite the calm, serious consideralion of every Ameri can eilixen, to Ine lollowiug irom too mnwntn ih"!" r loiiclung die votes of James K.Polk. Nol a slnteinenl is here made, not o fad t here recorded, for which wo do nut hold ourselves responsible, ullhoogh il may be considered a work of supererogation, when il is known from whal source we conv. Who is there, in whose breast there glows a spark of patriotism, nud who i not insensible lo emotions of grati tude, who run vole for James Iv. I'olk, in view ol men a re- rdf W here is die man, hottest, disinterested mnn, whose heart is alive to the appeals of honor, virtue, and truth, who can contribute to ihe elevation of James K. Polk lo ihe Presidency of the United Stales while such charges simd m judgment against him, lo bo viewe I by the whole world? His friends dare not, nicy win not riK inetr veracity, uy u-lioniug what we copy below from the National luu-lligencer. THE R EVOLUTION A KY t r r Hl-iia ahu o"-DIERS.ti .. . .inn.niunnl ronrnurli lo Renublies liml ihe v are un- gralelul. We have uo tune hero to uxuuuue ihe insiory oi Ihe ancient Republics wilh relerence lo Hie juiien ui mis c-:iiuro. In our own days, we rejoice ilt.il il has been repel led by lite conduct ol tins internment, m reiaumi io im surviving officers and soldier in the Revolutionary war, ol whose services and sacrifices if our Government have not repaid ihem wilh the splendid gilts and pensions witti wiucn DunnM-an Government have m frcqneul instance rewarded )arlicu- lar successful soldiers and statesmen me recompense, i.ir ro-moved Irom parsimony, has been such as a Uepubhcan Government could with pmpriety oiler, and such as f Republican citizen might, wilh self-respect, receive. Had, however, thu politics ot' Mr- P"lk prevailed in tlie House of Ki'prcientalives, when die principle ol the Revolutionary Pension Hyilem wn established, the thousand ol the veterans of the war of Independence, die evening of whose life has been cheered and blessed by the IhiuiiIv ol Iheir country, would have dragged out, loo often in abject poverty, the miserable remnant uf iheir earthly existence, The votes which lie had nu opportunity to give on iho subject uller he came uilo public tile, leave no doubt on the mind that, had he entered it eight or len vears earlier, die sin of ingratitude would, so far as dccwie"d ukhi him, ye I lie al ihe door of die Republic. llu voles in Ihe House of Representatives m the years ft:i. HW7, HUH, IH-HI, lUl 1 . MH, ns recoidtd in die Jour-nals of Iho House, against bills lor the rebel of Revolutionary otlieers uud soldiers, runsliiule a monument, more durable limn bras, lo his waul of litasralitv, to say nothing of jus- lice, lo the aged survivors ot dm Revolutionary Army; lo those who had haiaided every thing lor their country 111 ihe lime that tried men's souls, uud who now, iu tiodily infirmity mid indigent rirmmsiiuice, appealed to ihe National Legis- luro lor a remuneration, mil loo large lor mo conniry io iw able to spare, nnd lor dieir priceless services how inadequate a reward! Wi-ll mkdii tliR si'dil of the oelnifenarv prnsioiiprs vet sur- tfinrf have siieeesied lo their descendaiiH or friends the motto on a imuncr, wnrcli we see was pnraiiL- u in-iim i late public occaston: "No Pmsiojmts, says I'ui.K: No I'oi.k: bat thk i rbio.-.h. The same narrow spirit as wn displayed by Mr. Pom io rfi'ard In tin- Riivoliilioiiarv survivors eencrullv was dis- plaved towards failhlul pubhe servnnls in Ins voles in other pariu-nlar cases. Il the Itepuldie ever hail a true patriot an. ii liiiibhil itnblic servant. Jam s.s Mo.niiok was thai man. II had u claim upon his country, for arrearages uud exienes incurred in the public service, which in l!!-h Con.'rei dirla-r..rl o, lu iit. mill nnlrrcd lo n: imitl. Mr. 1 OI S voted against (laving either the principal or the iiilen l uf il- A.r:li,i. n'lit.11. noon sonic sitPiilemeiU.irv bill for the final a rjusliiieiil of thnl claim, Mr.Pol.K voted against it, mid ac companied ins vote wiin ine rcinaru, nr n.HBimiir.i - would have choked nlimisl uuy other man, that "tins indivni ual hat no claim upon thu Aithott! Ileenterlaitied the same opinion, prnbably.of Mjor(i ner-nl Jaioh Huowa, that most worthy num and brave soldn r, whose blood tfnwed In-ely for pw country nnd in her honor, in the war of WWL When, on hisdeaih.m Htli.theca'.eol his willow and family eaino U-foio Congress liir some legislation, in the way of a slit;lii compeiiatioii Ibr services which had, beyond doubt, shurleiied the life of iheir Mipmrtcr and pro-teclor, Mr. I'ol.K voted ng.i i usl iho bill introduced for Ihe mrposo of relieving them, which, however, notwithstanding siippoMiiou. oecaiut! a mw. A like ihankles spirit was urunfeOrd bv Mr. Pol.K, when, IH.it), on the loss of dm Cnii.-d Slates dnp i faruet, the idows and orphans of the ollicers mi l M iiuieii who perisli-il on hoard of her. iMHilioned the Legisl.iiure of iheir cniin- try fiir rebel. Hu w. one ol lorty-lwo Ri-pr-eniatives who t.'.tixl nir.iitKl 1 1 in toll lor irrauliiitr such relief, one hundred and thirtv-eiglil voles being given (lortiuialely) on the ollu r side. Ytil. il i said, du re ate ollin-n of the navy, whosup- Mirl the eleeiiotiof Mr. Polk. Into what inconsistencies will not the fury of parly lend men! THE SUPPRESSION Or THE SLAVE-rKAI'r.. Whatever ihtlerence of opinion mav exist, anioii iliose li.i live oudnr dill'erenl decrees of latitude in our conniry, concerning the institution ol slavery euiatled ohh it by die tinveritmcm irom wturn we were s-p.irniru "k-" tinu ol ludeH.tid.,liep1 lln-reean he. at this day, lit lie diversity of sentiment as lolhu Inifbanlv and almmmalion of the Aln- can slave-trade. Interdicted in our own (Mitts al tin; earliest moment thiii die t oiistilul:oii would allow, it has never since enjoyed iu any pari of tins emmlry any smpaihy or eoniitc- nance. aiii'Mik me inoi enniesi nim prrs-'-rii; .i of it, in every form, is the H. n. Cm vtu.r r i stun Mi k-ckii. who, during mnnv years' service iu public hie, never omiilcd any opportunity I aiulesl bis abhorrence ol it, uud to induce l ongrc 10 no ine snme. On tho ;H dnvof Msrch, HUI, Mr. illKRcr.R moved, in Ihe House of Represenl-dives, the following resolution. ilriotred, Thai the President of the Uuded Stales he re quested lo renew and lo pmwculu, from lime lo lime, such iieiioliuliHlion wilh the several iiuiraiiuie Powers of Europe ami Americn, a he ipav d.-eui expedient for the i H'cciual ah-(liimu ni i)u Afro-nn slave lriide. and lis iillimalo deuuncia- imn, a piracy, under the law uf nations, by llie consent of the civilized world.' On llio Birn-eiuir lo llu resolution, llie Previous nuesiion, moved bv Mr. Pol.K. having been agreed to. tin que.lion was taken on the passage of tho resolution, and decided nllir-malively, as follows: Yi ia1 It Nt'ys Messrs. Alexnnder, Harbour, Hamwell, James Hlair, Houbha. Canon. D tii'i'l, W. R. Davis, D.-dia, IMd-lev. Foster, tiaitlier. Hall, ILivnes, Hiil. C. JMin-on, La mar. Lea. Lovull, Nuckalls. Ov.-rlou, Pall.m. POLK,l'-t-ler. Rencher. Riiainj SH'iirht, Wilty, Thouipsou, Treivanl, Wiekhlle, ilde, 1 aiieey Nu I lu rKtfilin wilh nut ceil III. Alllmtigh in the atH m Hire of the question, we find such mineul Southern ami We: tern name aslho-eof Dk mo, I, (.mint, and Mi Diri-nr., Mr. Pol.K could not vole wilh it, V..I. .I n.,iail llw fr.ollllloll. We hnve emnpleied the review winch we propose.! to (air-Ives or Mr. Pm.lt 'a uiMie career. We cm discover in it i mrii hot ihiti of iudnorv. a oualiiv lnud.Ulo m ilsell, but, in eombmulioH with his had polities, only serving Iu make die locotocoism ol Mr. Pol.K more active and niicioii e liul no reason, in a survey r In political life, for trusting bun wilh Ihe power which constitutionally iiemng to a i fi-mui-im of the Dinted Mmles. and slill less wilh tluve wl' h, Willi Ihc Xiimple (M'toro In in which he wonci uinuMn.ie.uy sirnc 10 iuoiuii. ho tn.L-lil of his own mere will undertake lo exercise. Wi. liml fin ilu emilrurv. lhrooi;lioul llu w lnne History 01 ni public ble, cimchnivc objeel.ous ag.imsl Inisitur hun with power of any kind, and, least uf all, with nb-miuie power over llie present weiiare ami iinun- hi y " II oi us nnrsuna il orv. wc can oisroci i x ih ir fy the elevation of Mr. Pm.K to die Presidency, it remain only for u lo iiiqu rc wheth-r there was any Hung in thr numner an.l eirrum itancra of the nomination to rec lend himm' his frllow-cilini g.-m-rally, as a suitable candidate for their sudraires for the lushest irit-l in their gill. J Ins in- uiry shall bu made the subject ol a tuluru uunilier. The Jasma-fncMl. Our adversaries do many tricks of deception; but one ol the scurviest is that recently perpetrated by Ihe editors of the (itobe. and which is cihibitud in the following extracts, l lie first is from the prospectus of the Globe for Soulliern distribution tho second from that for Northern distribution. Rend them: J'lOipfCtttt Dollar rroipectui of the Dollar (itobe, under tnchmre o t'tooe, under encioure oj lion. Ihtvid S. Jletd of North ( aroltna. Exlrnct.1 Is a national debt, to bolster up such a bank, and support the government here di'liaucc oi inu as ildoes m Li ifonuiar win, i . Hid, nircaoy I ton. A. Hidlack of Venn- tylrania. Eilracl.1 Is a national debt, to holster up such a bank, to support the government here ill defiance of the popular w ill, as II floes in Migiann. Bireniyi- iruialed hv Mr. Clay du-J righmled by Mr Clay during riim his short rciin i the . hisshorl reign in the chu skin Congress, calculated lo givo lum Die kiillragrsnl ine nniioii for Ihe presidency! Is li'S disiribolion Inw, wasting the proceeds ot the public domain, provided by our revolutionary fathers as a sacred fund for Ihe defriirc of our Republic, and grndually lo I extended as homes for actual settlers, idler being ccudcmiied by the people, suddenly lo increase the popularity of die author of the nefarious scheme, w hich he himself denounced in Iheear-Itt-r and heller days of his political career ! coon-skin Congress, calcula ted lu give lum the sulfrages of the nation for llie presidency ! IS THE DISHONEST. FRAUDULENT sail EXORBITANT TARIFF OF MIL CLAY'S CON-GRESS, LEVY INW TAXES UPON THE PEOPLE FOR THE NECESSARIES OF LIFE, HH) PER CENT. HEYOND THE REVENUE DUTY, Tor the HENEFIT of the OVER GROWN CAPITALISTS, LIKELY T PROMOTE IIIS FURTHER poLI'l l- CAL ADVANCEMENT I his dihiribuiioii law, wnsl- inr the proceeds of the tiublic domain, provided by our revolutionary fathers as a sacred Kind lur the defence ol the Ite-puhlic, and gradually to he extended us homes for actunl tilers, as our pnpmalioit ex puuds, aler lieiug condeuuied py t in1 peopic.su. neiiiy 10 increase llie populnrilyol the hu thor of the nefarious scheme which hu himself denounced thu cither nud belter days of his pnlilicnl career! Now, in t ihts loo contemptible ton villainous loo Driv elling even for the comiei:r uf Amos Kendall I Mlnrtllng, conclusive, IrrrsUllblr smf Hint Brll-Issla Jold i rsnployrd to Inlliiesire tho roiuinsj election! Rrnd! Itrnil! If there is in the Slnle of Ohio, n single individual who has been incredulous lunching the farts already published, slew ing dial Hrilish Gold has actually been subscribed and brought Iu this country to in linear o Iho coming c'celioii, let lum reud the following, nnd he enn doubt no longer. Such evidence cannot bo questioned 1 and in view of the startling Incls in possession of llio freemen of the country, wo would ask if thvy ran hesitnlc ns to their duly. II llio American people nrc not lit for llio yokes nnd chain m colonial vassalage, ihi-y have nol concluded lo bend the knee nnd surrcntlcr lluir dearest inlvrcits, rights and privileges, at the behest of parly, foreiiru dictation uud liefore Ihe iiilluenre of a base bribe. lltev will prtclniin a Veidirl through the ballot box, at tho coming election, thai shall utterly obhlernio the lasl vestige of lorofoeoism from the land. Read the testimony ! I lie lead ers of tho opposition may venture so mr, for the purpose of deceiving you, as to call in question a statement lo which is attached tho name and seal of thu lending Justice of the Pcare, of Wheeling Va. Hut we warn yon ngaiust their tiutained denials, ami wo warn Ihem to Ikj careful to what lengths ihey carry iheir laincriiy and deception. Ouce more wc call the solemn nlloulioii ol every ireo voter to the follow ing, puUidird nmirr the editorial had, of the Wheeling Ttmei, of Tneday last. Freemen, decide shall Hruisli Gold prevail ! To honest men among our oponcn(i wo would say. is there not a point beyond which you cannot foi low party T From the Wheeling Times. Tho Hrilish UwtA prove!. Wo have published evidence that there were subscriptions of moiii'V in England lor the puroc ol securing Ihe election of Polk and Dallas, tho Free Trade candidates, enough lu snti-fy any man dud the orc-enl eaiivais was rarried on by the Lnrnlocn parly tiiou HKl TISIl GOLD but wc are not yel done with the 'proof. Rend, rend Americans, ihe following extract of a letter from John Og len, a man Working in A inuiiiiiHriiirinir establishment in Euulniid.lo his son in lln.ciiv. "1 wns in London about a work nt;o. They are raising money lo semi to sttiiixtrt Polk and Dallas tor President, There is nothing doinr here in our 'lf,"ff(V ur watchword JOHN (Ml DEN. Persnnnllv annearcd before me, a Justice of llie Peaco in nnd for Ohio county, Thomas Ogdeu, and made oath that the nlmve is a true and genuine rstract frmi a b rier he received Irom hi father uow living in Selling, England, oaled August io. inu. Given under my hand this ."Mi day or .NeplemN-r. UHARLtSD. KNOX, J. P. The Antidote rboinn Ii. limner re, Tketisne 1,. Ilnuier! We cannot more effectually answer the argumenis nose used by Thomas L. I lamer, against a National Hank and Prolcc live Tanlf, than by ihe um or his own speeches nnd argil mi-nls, mode in IU.U. While we freely concede all dial Mr-I lamer' friend can ask , as to his talents, we cannot avoid lite conclusion thnl no man iu the Stale hasliceii more fickle and changeable on nil the leading questions of the day. Micro was more truth limn poetry in tho declarations of Medary alioul him, as published in the Journal a few days since, and (iiioUid Irom a letter written by him at Cincinnati. Our space will nol allow us to quote al length from Hauler's address lo the volers of the Filth Congressional District, dated Angus! Id, but wo shall Kivc a lew of his potilwne, and iho render can eHsil) infer what kind or mi argument an able man liku him would make iu their support, lu the first pinto he declares of a U. S. Hank, "II il t.viMitultnnal, I nm tferf.rtlu wtiititd that Cou-'ress possesses IMiwcr, under llie Federal Constitution, lo creule u bai'k.(" Again: says Mr. Hamer iu the same address "It it I-.xpfdirnt Again, I Iwlieve it is expi tlieiil lo h ivo a I'niled Slates fin nk if wo can have one Hhii lair mid proper principles. 77iii hat been the opinion of every head t the Trratuty 'r-pari me nt (fath Federal and lirpubikanjfrom RiJert Jor-m. ihe great financier of the JltroluliiiH , down to Lnui$ M'l.ant, the prettnt fret clary of the 'J'rtaniry, both iwlu-tire. The Turin. Mr. Hniner made a very strong argument in favor of a I'rotrctire Tariff in iho same nddrcss. After saying dial free trade would aiuwer, if nil would adopt tl, ho concludes thus . .... Hat when one Nnlion ndupts Us reiiriclive po'iry, for ilia purpose of promoting her own intercuts ami crippling llio trade, rommerce, m.iuiil'nciuri's and agriculture ol oi her nations, they are ohligrd, iu self defence, to resort to rooplt-r- 'filling measures. I liev mtisi ciiner oo so. nr auow ine ior- eign ualioii lo legislate lor lliem, and inu lo rcuuer ttiein inn- ilaries, While Uiey are iMiojungui ineir incowiu midiiiuvh.-u-lenco. fr-r-Maiy Democracy U stub lie si laslrpcn dears the Ifenuiliw of louiteucy Kxbibtled In Obey in if Orde The Wholu lorminii n fairly Ii04kiM-4jilMat PROGRESSIVE DEMOCRACY. From the Cincinnati Enquirer. " The man who VA H a Democrat twenty fit wan ago, md etttertaint the nrincipleu NIHV.tliat (lumrtu 1)ID twen ty-tire yean ago, and h xinol iKonhi;sii.li viih the party, hut re inaimit stationary . JtHJ I tv r.i l l ri it. j .ak.B ill.HIM) TIK'TIMKS AMD THE PARTY. "Hr. is Mot A Dkmociut NOW. Nay, the man who standi in relation to some principles now where the Democratic imriy didii.tLT rr.H vkahs iuu, 18 NOT A DE.MO-CRA'l'NOW. l'otimrrndHFeyorrowd. If you would be esteemed n Deuiocral of IttlJ, you mint abandon a po tioti of your HVP F. ti AiUA TK D FAITH. Twenty-seven years ago, in HJHi, the Dkmuchatii- party, in Congress, under llie Dkmockatic adiniiiisiratiuuuf Aladismt KsTaB- i.isifttt a Hank uk thk U. States. A large portion of the Mriy ktqijHised such nu iiistiiulimi coiisliluuounl, awl all tsppeiir lo h.ive thought ils charter sound policy and it wns not till near Iweuiy years alter thai the parly changed f'l'-S PRINCIPLES in' regard to a Hank. If you then enterlain the same principles which you entertained in common with Ihe parly twenty-five years ago, in relation to this question, YOU ARE NOW IN FAVOR OF A HANK OF THE U. MTATKcJ TO HE CHARTERED HY CONGRESS. If you are, vou cannot be a Democrat of 11)13, though you were in lUld-'Ift. Ten years ago the Parly in Ohio ivkhk 15 i avor or Static Hanks, and actually Fronted, by acts or Legislature, many couriers. You doubtless believed in common wilh the party, in those Hank dnririues; you acted with the parry, lint the Df mocralv of Ohio art now op- pitted to them. If you T i i.l, adhere to ynur political faith of i.M, m relation to inese mailers, you ahk hut a dkmockat Now, Twenty-five years ugo, the Democratic party thk WMOI.K couitkv luslilied nud sustained a HIGH TA- iti v r . ruieeii years nt;o, m.n io o., t ur, i ahi i as a Iv sustained the PRO I E("!'IVE TARIFF of llt'jit. vel the party A n A r A It if tt now oppotea to a J Alii r t jot flit) I AC i ION. If you stand m reierence lo this question where the parly DID iweuly-Hvc, nr nulv ten years ago, you aro NOT H 777 THK PARTY NOW. I miirht continue lhi coulrnsl between the I'RESEN I and tOR-MlUi POSITIONS OF THE PARTY, upon other question. Hut the contrast upon ihn surjecis ol' National Itnnb Kitn Itm.L mill Tar.iT nr.- olln-ii-nl l toaliiiii mv nn. Mlioti.tlml ON EVAN NOT UK A DEMOCRAT NOWt W HO ENTERTAINS Till. NAME OPINIONS HE HID TWENTY-FI VE OR EVEN THIRTY YEARS AOO, Al.THOIHiH HE MA Y THEN HA VE ACTED WITH THE PARTY. AND UEEN FOR THAT DA Y A UUOD DEMOCRAT." The Protest Or An Attempt nl Indrpnndcnce. Exirnct from the Letter ' To thk I k hoc it act or Ohio" Signed W. Allen, lleuj. Tappan, John H. Weller, J. llriuk-erhoof, Emery D. Poller, II. St. John, W. C. MCauslen, Joseph Morris, J. Matthews, E. iK-an, A. Duncan, Hon-oroide Memben of Concrete,) dated Washimutun, Uay 1, II! 13. " We your Democratic Delegation in the two Houses of Congress, DEPLORE THE NECESSITY WHICH COMPELS US TO ADVISE YOU ihtl, notwithstanding this slnle of facts, we hare reaton to fear thnl a very serious movement has lor weeks txicn on tool in Una my, in ttic ah- hs.m r. or' thk rKori.K,wmcnis inteuiieo lo act, u possipiu, upon (hat t oiiveiiiion, aiin lo uidtire trial liooy Io hkt Asimk THE WILL OF THE AMERICAN DEMOCRACY, lliu exphritcly and solemnly expressed Co ditcjrd the man in tehme favor that will wat to espreitrd, nnd lo iioiiiiuutv in his stead tomt other, ot a lT otiii.ii jierson." The fieri ti lie mf C'onaiateiiey. From the Ohio Slalesmau of F'rom Ihc Statesman, June 2d Mayl!). "They thu people will " When the proMsed an- jnol vole for men pledged to neiatioii was first broached, tuitain England in her gratp-it was nrrtimpnuu-d by an out- ingfvr Tesat , and interfering cry ngaiusi tlie Hrilish lor at- .with our own cause in that tempting lo gel possession of matter, as tin Clay parly aro. the country. Tlie cry was! ' They will ask, whal host- " England would gel hold of ness is il of (lueen Victoria, it am) alolili slavery." I he 1 whether wc run our lines a Hrilish would get Texas and LITTLE FURTHER raise cotton, to ihe if real iuju- SOUTH, or a little further ry .u ine rsnutucro pianif-ts. iiiarui r I tiey woiihl make a Pee couil " Ihey witl ask, it it was Iry there, and all our slaves important to England lo have would run off to them." This a piece of our territory off laie was mr ine people io iininc in ine norin-wett. may sciie ineir jf.Aioi f.tr, ami n not io equally l.Ml'iiK- From die Nashville ltauner, Mr, t'lny'a Horse njboee. We take pleasure in lavint before our readers tho following i me renting- correnpuiidetice: iNAHftvii.l.K, August Vi, 1H1L To tlte Hon. II. CVuw. tiin; VVo bee lo iircHOiit to you a aot of Horse iStioen, mailo by ua at the bead of the Liberty J'ule in NuBhville, li' feut from tho ground, on the HHh ot tins preHcnt moiilh. P len so have tin1 in put upon your Saddle Homo, and maytlio Spirits of VasliiiieLont Warren, and all our patriot ic dend, watclt over vou and be like r.ltinh h mantle to Kliiha. WILLIAM DRIVER, UKNRY AMKNT, WILLIAM 8TKWART, To the Hon. II. Clay, Aalilund, Ky. AfiiLAMD, Hist Aueust, 1644. (lentlemrn I have this duv safely received set of Horse Shoos inude by you "at the head of tho Liberty Pule in NaHltville, sixty two feet from the ground, on tho tenth of this present month." I thank you cordially for this highly acceptable present. The accocintiona with which tho manufacture ol these shoes is connected between Heaven and Kurt 1 1, on a Liberty Pole, iU feet from the ground, in Nanhville give to your present an extraordinary interest. I shut I use it as you request. May nil your strokes, in Politics and on the Anvil, ever bo as well directed os those wncn wore enipioyea in nioking these shoes! Health, lone lives, and prosperity to you all. Such is the fervent wish of your faithful friend and obedient servant, II. CLAY. Messrs. William Driver, Henry Ament, and William Stewart, &c. Happy Device, The following devices were in a procession of tho Whigs of Alleghany county, Miiryland: Shohmakrhs. Cluy first, Clay hat, L'ltty awl tho time. BLACKSMITHS. The motto wns "Clny & Protection We strike for Clay the sons of Vulcan." T1X.NKHS AND COI'PKIISMITIIS. Clay, Tariff, end Union, versus Polk, free Trade, and Texas. PokieSfVou can't "wl soddtr" us. BAICKMAJIF.il I, By Clay we live SCULPTORS AND STONK -CUTTERS. The Union stands a Monument, To gallant Henry Clay." CARI'F.NTF.RS. " Tis plane their Sfreir ore all loose. This lores the Locos and augers well for Clay." CAItlPIKT MAKERS AND UPHOLSTF.RF.ltS, "Cluy made a good Secretary Hu must be boss Cabinet maker," Another " Know us by our works." COOPERH, "American Independence. Let every tub sfnnd on its own bottom." RAKKIIS. "Tho East is good, tho Soulh is raisivgt The West will keep tho Fre blnzintr." Henry Clay A friend in A-neunl Is a friend indeed." IlKIVK TIILM IN Til AN N F. X AT ION WIT 11 A III Nil. lien the 1 rralv wns sent in for eouliimniiou, il wns mil In lR3(i tho banks of Ohio piid into tho State Treasury in the shape of a tax $;i,Hly 71. In IH II, this tax will not exeud fiiMimi. iicoioco policy has destroyed this source of rove into and foreign bonds to circulate their nnus free of tax anion jr us. Porhnpi the tux payor will think uf this about these days, Ohio's all tiro of tho proceeds of Iho sate of tho public lands would axerngo about $;itMI((KK) per annum: If Me had the bttnk tnx of W and this land fund, which it is tho nol to v of the Whigs to obtain, the burden of ONK HALP of tho taxation of tho Stato would bo relieved. Think of that tax payers. Summil Utaioiu A f nfrwisusl War ",0 -fo Brl1 The junior editor of die Ulobe, it is pretty generally known. has made several heavy lieu on the rosnll of ihc coming elec tion. Some have Im'cii Hi n loss to lell how it hnpeiw that a man of his supposed Meanly sliimld lc willinR lo U-l iu surh a hopeless cne. The senior editor, Mr. Hlair, Intviii" gonr lo llie counlry, ihe Junior lul.es oceasion lo unlaisom himself very frankly, under his own proper uanic. The following is a Mittionof three rolumn nrlicle; I think it tinnier for ine lo slnle here Dial I tin re not made a Im-i lor niyt-ll lor several years ast ; and thai il is my intention never lo receive a single rent that may he Won on a hel, ifionch I may ronirihule to pay Ix-ts made hy me for other persons nil elections. I am opposeti io iH-iunji. ea-eMiiy surh sums as those wlm make the Ih Is Hre unahle to hm- hut I am still nvrc optioed lo seems; lht snrrt-ss of the le-moeratir parly mil iu p upardv hy die Wlntrs pronisiinr Ms wlnrh, if not tnarn. wdl induce those who " hale a minority " to go to them. 1 am indebted lo tlie democratic parly fur allor vurv nearly a I the money 1 am worth and I hum and belie i c 1 w.ll end as nmrli for il, in promrtion lo my miMiis, as anv "dier man. Though I will not irm money lo inmre ils sur'ress, I Will lose, or spi ild, thousands mill TkNS tir Tlloifs.iii, to prevent its deli'St. " If any Wlnu; shall think, from what I have said, dial I think he will win Ihe money whirls I slnki-d against hu, lie will lie vsrcftiotitly mistaken. I confidently cerl Io win, lor llio person tor wlnun I hel, nine-tenth of the money I have put up, who h will esreed ten thousand ddllars, " As I desou iti keep iioilnuit; hark m relation lo die ImM I have made, I will here slate llil all of them are for my partner, Fratiris I. Hlair, who is iu llie roo.itrj to-dny t bill I make free lo name him, tH-beVintr that heile-ires no concealment about die matter. From what he has said In me, 1 believe his prineiiMl ol'jret in bet tins; is lo Hop lite hrawiiiK of the Whisrs, which he ihinks will srnre Ihe timid who are on lliu fenrs, uud induce ll i lo lull ou ihe Wilis; side " Here, then, we have (ho whole secret disclosed, whether intentionally of otherwise. As Ihe editors of the (ihihe have become immensely rich through the kindness and muiiilirewc of llio Loroforo pnriv, ihey leel hound lo show their pairmi. ism b) tacrticing a little. The money ihuy hel, is so much, (if the aliove means any thin? at all,) sacrificed in order to keep up apearaiices ami prevent llioir followers from ginns; over laidily lo iho Whirs, The middle paragraph is put in as a sort of saving elmiso, lo prevent tho condition from having a disRstrtHis elfect hut wo cannot resist Iho belief that the article was written and puhlidicd in order to save Ilia money of die Incoforns, by preventing lliem from betting too freely on trie tuptot'd opinions and cm6'Wc of Iho editors of the (ilolw. Observe particularly tho closing sentence of the junior editor, in speaking of Ihe seitiot, fur whom ho has heflii making Ms and not for himself" From what hu has said In me, I believe his prim-ip d object in belling is to ttoptht bracing of the Wliigi, which lm thinks wdl si'AHK THK ti w i it, who a nr. os thk rim r., aish iniiuis tiiim t f-At.l. on thr wiiiu siiiK " That's rich lee idedly Thooe who have been in ihc dark, ran now see, hy a confession from Ilia very head riinrlen of all lint loeofocoism of the land, the lencdi and breadth, heighth and depth of Inroloro faith, Thev can imders'nnd the secret rauo of the heavy -,nj w ith w inch our Ohm l.ocoloros orrasioinilU steel us. Thi'V can understand whvarertain three IniU-d bashaw of locoWnism in tins city, who does up tlie work of ihe (il he for Ohio, and who owes a 'cry heavy dehl ol gralilude lo 'the piUtu," brags so hard, and (vc.iirnai. in s trvintf emergeney, n gloomy hour is so ready lo make a bet lot which he could ohiaui a lhounnd bidders! The less know-nig ones of loeofoeoism dumld leant prudent from whal we have copied from the (ilolw, and not go too diploave the nerves ol ihi " ImiJ," lur whom so much olitituJ is kit. Are Ihrr net fsnllr alnnderslf We do not know when we h ive wilnesseil any thing more unprovoked and uiijuililiuble than Uw assault on llie poor but vidimus girls of iho i ai torim, fapku mills, Air., mado by Ot ivctt JoJits, lite loroforo candidate for tin Btalr rten- ale in llie Hamilton district, In wltiefi ni.usion is mane in itir following albdavil, which we copy from ihe ( iK-umali Allns. If ihe fathers nnd brothers of these females do nut resent die mlijinily and slander, they arc not worthy to be railed men. Whal mockery to call such men as Oliver Jones, drmoerutt when to accomplish iheir unholy piifwc and secure Ihe spoils of victory, ihey would blast llic reputation uf ihe poor laboring girls, or Iho counlry and bring reproach on thnl very la-hor ilsclf, by identifying il with the infamous and vile. Mr. Niles, whose statement is given, is a man ot uiioouhtcu cftrt itnlity aud respectability: Hi a to mm i uf Solomon L. Nh.ls J cerlifv hat I heard Oliver Jour say. in Ihe course of a pnli lie sjieerh which lai ninde in ihe seliool house ol ihe lliirtl iliNinel in l idumi.ia lowasinp. ini n;iic wn oi u-n n on: i.u lory guls, or operamcs, at Lowell, were si ronil only to llie Ol'llillCS Ol (HirOllWHJ nooses. I1U ri.mi.nm.n-M mi iiir Ht t'v LdwHrd l. Monroe, a worthy democrat, wtm told Mr. Jones lh.il lie had lived in Ihe nc'chltorhond of Irfiwrll, and km w Ihal he was m st.iken, and hrtdlxTiimiinlorined. as lo die moral character of tlie females nl that plarei dial ttic leniiih-s of the niniiufacliirmg establishments ot Lowell wrre as correct iu their deporfm-ul and as much in pec led as any hu w as eer acipiainled with. Mr. Jon'"S. however, persevered iu his assert maintaining thai a large portion of them were as he rrpresenicd iIh-iii. I le said In okc from Imlory and what ho knew of them in similar establishments surh us paKT mills in thmrounlv. I give itiesul-sinnrculhts remarks, aud.uear as I can recoiled, his very wonls. SOLOMON L. NILES. ITT Tho following from Mr. Clay's speech on the Tariff, shows his opinion of die factory and null girls: t will now givo ycai Ihe declaration of Mr. Clay about Ihe rhftrnrlert ol those lemales wlm work in those inNiiulactorirs in the North. Mr. ('lav in his speech on ihe land, delivrwt in the House of ltepreentativei, April I H.U. while srak-ins; on the sul'jrcl nl ein:c ralion, made tlw following remarks women aiid rlnldien who could not nugraie.aml would ho comparative 1 idle if manulaclofSfs did nol ensl. may lr profitably cmploved in ihem. This is a very great henrlil. I witnessed the advantages resolluig from the employment of this description ol our potmlalion, m a vtsii wiorn i wieiy inadr loihe Wnhham maimlarlory near llosion. Tlwrcsome hundreds of girls ami boy were occupied in separate apart- incuts. The greatesl outer, neaiiass. aim apparein romion reigoiil ihrmiglMMit Ihe wIhiIc eslsl-lidiiiient. l lie danghlrrs r nominliln I m mi era I in mm instance I rrincmher tho daughter of n Senator in lite Stale Legidatore) were usefully employed. I hey would come down to ine ninmuactory, re-main Hrhnps soiiio monllr. and reinni with llietr rnrninirs lo iheir families lo assist them ihroiiiiMtl the year. Hul one instance had occurred, I was informed by tho inlelligi-nl mnun-ger, of doubtful rtmdnci nu die part of any of ihe females, and after ht was divmiised there was rcaiuu lo believe that injustice had lieen done M." la no i n A good Whig on Alum creek, sent t Iwo largo potatoes, a few days linre, as a sprrimiu of ihc productions of his farm. Old Hlinrou ilwill Ih) set n, lakes tin lead, as lm is worthy to do, and eclipse all her sMers in Iho production of potalues, as she is wont to do in her lug majorities: WoHTIIIMOTO!s,8epl.;VI. Illll. Ed it ori of O. S. Journal: lit is n.i mo; "Old S liar on" is tun) io Ih uI in ils majoniy of true V higs, as yai knowi nud you will jierremi by ihe seriiiieii I send )ou, thai she islmrd to Mil in llio sue nl lu r sweet potatoes. The one sent weighed .f lbs. U os. llie day it wns ilug Irom thu "Clay" sod on wIikIi it giew, with hnnlly onimary ruunaiioti, lours, we. rged la'fotc the Scnaie upon krrt of falte protnitu, and tiese trim in ii, ns vieu were inn tellers no ol eoon-sk proven lo be totally Jtlie antt banners , when such great uufiamUd, They were raised iueitioits are nl slake. 1 fence alone tor lliu purpose ol ilc- jlliey are in all rpiariers turn-cctvrugthu people ns In tho ine; to the mom meet of the real ol-jert, and nol a title of Conrentimat ilalttmore, ami vioence was aniliireilloshow lorevcr ouiitiur all Conner- that Knglaml whs desirous of 'lion, iKihlicallv, wilh a oarir getting posiession of Tesas, ihat ran bring nothing but at wns the least degrw exerl- danger lo the reHlhic by their ing uerseii io accompusn uiai success. u urn. "On lite enntrarv, there were dittinet tjlicitt tlitarme-menta of auwturh with on the part oj Great llritain; aud so near ami ronriusivu was ihn, that Mr. I'allioun, iIhi istTrelarvof !inie,wlio tnntle ihe Treaty, did not dare to place it bulorr Ihc Senate upon these gnmiids. I lie rcur oiui-et in annex ation was INK I'KUI'r, I D AHO N AMI KXTLN- SH IN OFHLAVF.lt V, and of lie I'OLI I It'AL f'OWKK f ihe bLAVK STA I LS : I'lns was ihe ground uixin which the Treaty was placed More the Seiu.te. Tlie Av- tmoms of the treaty desired to see si,Avt.nr perpetuated in ihn Souih. TIILY UK SIKLIl TO K F, K Til K SLAVF. HOl.lllMi INTK- KF.ST MOKF. I'OWKK-FI LLV H KI'ltKSLN TKI) IN CONliKKSS. Theywiih-td to get the controlling idu-cure in the council! of OuNation." TANT in us to ert a little to make up fur it in the louth- weit r "Thev are not williur A sKtosii Ti m k lo trust Me md- f Slav Cfl. was the date of tho lri-erkly Hlatesmaii, l nose who lake Ihe weeklv. will prohnbly hud thu article in tho paitcr published oth June. So of June llii the ronients of this date wcrr probably rarried over to the Weekly or the Sri Jul. We are thus particular, because wo have rr reived Irllers or nepury on Ihe subject. Obeylnsj OrHrre, mw The Pnrlf Leelttng-CJInn, rroin llie Ohio Sialesman, Ibxtrart of a letter from (len. Tlu great, tsr-seeing stales- Jai it son, lUlerl June H: man has won golden opinions ' Texas is ihe key to our by his Texas letter. Kvrry .safclv from Itrttith influence body is admiring and eulogi-laud llriholi invasion. I snv xing it. Ertn hit enrmiet arrrpt ber hand while she knvck nndrr. IT will wis holds it out to us, and shut ihe him livi: TlluusAHU votes -iiimr airauisl all lulure danger, U Ofllo!" rernrdlett of comrquencei. From ihe Albany Arris. ' No one could regret, more .Mk. as ItuHRfi us AasKX- than I did. tho position in ation oi- I t.xxn. (which Mr. Van Ituren plareil ss e iiuonsn io-oht air. v nn iiumseii or nis iriier on the Huron's teller on this deeply .ami? nation uf Tesas. Had interesting imcsimn. Long 'he come ont for immxhiatk as il is. il will richly repay an annexation, he would hnve pREAcitipto Politics on Nunday. The notable example of CJernlt Sriitth, of New York, in preaching politics of tho Abolitioiistauip on Sundays, is being lb) lowed iu this county. An elderly, reliffious, and in maiiy respects wor-tJiy man, of Brooklyn, but who is mainly occupied in a crusade against slavery iu general, and Whipisin in particular, called a meeting at the usiml place of holding religious exercises, in I'nruia, last Sundny evening, for the purpose of delivering as wns suppoa-cd,aleLnlimate anti-slavery addross. This he com-menced doino;, but prcttly soon bc;an to direct his artillery against Mr. Clay exclusively, and said all the hard things about him tlmt he could think of. But not a word was lisped about Mr. Polk, and for aught his auditors hoard front the speaker, they would noiwtvo supposed that there were any candidates lor the Presidency but Mr. Clay nnd Mr. Dirney. He besought them to vote lor JJirnev tins time, and it they thought four years hence it was nol then best to vote for an abolition cnndidite, vote fur some other. Try it this once and see if their consciences would nut bo the more quicL Cleveland Herald 91 c' a I In the Stnndrrcr. Wo learn from the Louisville Journal that Gen. McCalla tlie Locofoco candidate for elector, in tho Lexington (Ky.) District, aud rvho lias been busy in slunderinjf Mr. Clay, by preferring charges of gam bling, and other immoralities, ngnuist him, Isteiy applied to tho first Presbyterian Church in Lexington. of which he was an elder, fur a cortificatu of good mural clmracter, winch the session unhesitiitingly refused ! To avoid expulsion he withdrew from ihe church. No wonder the Locofoco use lum as a manufac turer of slanders against Mr. Clay. Ho is exactly the rigid sort of a scamp fur Hint business. Xenia i arch Lght. Old ftishismrd Whig Krohillen. Mr. Comstock. an old Kcvolutiouor of Burlington township, informs us that three little girls, living near him, aged from ten to twelvo years, one a 1 ait Lr liter of a widowed lady, named UucK. went into Ihe woods and cut a very pretty ash some forty feet in length and nearly eighteen inches in circumference, which they removed unassisted to the house uf Mrs. Duck, where they raised it with a little assistance. A ling now flouts very prettily from its top. There ts Whig resolution and energy for you worthy of 7G!! attentive perusal. Il is MintroiiiAii like production. received the unanimous vote of the convention ns a candi date for the Presidency, and wouin nave ueen elected uy mo rtoiim ami mo est y aC' rlmnniion." Then let INilk. Dallas am! Texas he the watchword nnd marked by that far reaching sagacity ami comprehensive judgment so eminently rhar artct islir ol Mr. an Huren s Stale paHari. I he ooesliou is disrupted in all ill ben r ine s, nnd his clear mind presents rotinicnien. and ('lav ami every point distinctly Itelore bis friend Frduighiiysvii, llie ine American people, r.rery menu atso ol Hlroliliom Amtnean reaJer, not enUrelu 'tor which he spurns at I uxns under the dominion of preju- wtl be arerwhelm'd by th awe, win atuni ine jortt oj m unanimottirvtceottie autun. conclmtiona. From the Ohio Statesman. Sept. 4, I (HI. "Ot II VI. AU SJ TIIICHK. "Tho i.osr Star or Tnii-inscription FOLK, DALLAS, ami Too.'1 OLD. TAVI.OIt. Thk Lisokst ykt. From our friend Dr. II. F.tiAKh, of Hurrison l., I'irkawny co., we have receivcl, as a speci- mm of his crop, four Mammoth Sweel Put it toes, the largest of which weighs full fair pounds, and measures I I inches in length ami U iucIh-s in circiimtervnee. Tim others weigh 3 lbs. each, making the weight of the tour thirteen imunds. Dr. ii. says hcercived dm seed rccenil from Kenlueky, and he thinks llwy may bo appropriately called Clay po.iot. Ho has some of the seed lo spare, ami he Ihinks before Franklin ran go ahead, she must try them. Who nrc hie Accicrnf Tlie ltorltestrr Democrat well says; 'F.very day we bear druuknnU, gamblers, adulterers, seducers, and horse thieves, flowing against llK!a (XAY as a ikltauchee aud sensu alist. And die oilier night, in a put. lie meeting where a man presided who is notorious as a seducer, and w here men acted u c Inch masters who ore now under arrest lor attempt to com-nit a raje. With tho records Ik-lore us and after an ample examination iif all the farts, we affirm, without tear of contradiction, that James K. Folk tvrcr cusi rote inaeor of the Cumberland Road! l.rl il he reinrtnlcrcd hy every voter of Ohio, and every man capable of estimating the importance of (his grea National thoroughfare, thai while n monument stands near the rond testifying to llio milinug ilToiis or Mr. Clay In bchulf of the woik, Mr. Folk's name Hinds rrrordrri in tho ar-cluvoa uf da) country, ns ils steadfast, umform enemy!! Nrui llt'isisi The election in Marylautltook place yesterday. Look out for mote Wing Thuudrr. An artivid from Menco ml vises us of tho destruction of Malamoras, by a hurrieauo. Il occurred on the -tlh Sept. Iwo hundred lives were lost, and lite greatest still snug prevails.The papers cnufirm the report about the rnblcry of (lov Shannon, on his way lioin Vera Cms to Mexico. John (luiucy Ariuim addresses tho Huston L'lay Clubs next Monday. The N- Y. Express uf Thursday says: Frwin VI ftf ! lliindrcst Thoiisrtnsl U'hlv iat C'enncll We copy from Iho Cincinnati Athtr tho fidlowing notico uf tho greatest gathering but ono ever held iu the West: TUB LINE KNCAMPMKNT. Wo learn from several persons who were pre sent, that tho Mass Meeting of the Whigs on tho boundary line of Ohio and Indiana, Inst rndnv and Saturday, was thronged by immense hosts of Whigs trom both Ntatcs. The nmunera present were van oualy estimated by good fudges at !H 1.0(H) to 1(H),-(HHJ. Tho tonts flxtcuded for a distance of near! a mile in length, hy half a mile in bnadih; ono of which was H-0 leut lung; another 1 KMeeLtne Hands of Music hnd ft tent especially devoted to their use, which was HHJ Icet long, and there were many outers from 0 to UK) feet hi length. There were a largo number of oxcollont Speakers presold, from Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana, and so great wns the throng, that five dilVercnt stands were erected, Irom which as many uiiieroui speak ers addressed the multitude at once. Amongst tho sneakers were (iuv. Mi:tcai.i O. IL Smith, liov. INiiNiiKvrrit, K. C. Ki iii sca, wm. l hittkhpi: Calhh II Smith, lien. Ukli- Vm. hkbb, Uev. Aa Tiim Kli.iott, Hawkihs of la. Hawkins of 0 C. F. Dkmpsry of Darko Cos, Jons Woun, Jab. IUm- nr.n. L. I). Campbfi.l. and many others, I loci ilea (ho speaking at the Kucatupmont, there were largo nirelinga nl llie contiguous uiwusiups ot Pane and Kudtinoiid, both of which places) wnro full The pm port ton present (mm Indiana, The Clnnnmett Tree. Mr. Cusiimu, our Minister to China, in an account of the island of Ceylon makes tho following state ments recocting the nature and cultivation ot the Cinnamon true. First, as lo evmamon culture. 1 he production in its perfect state is almost a monopoly of tho Island of Ceylon, and its growth is confined to ft very narrow tract of land on the southwest side of the is land, chiefly in the neighborhood of Culomo, This docs not seem to be tho result of political arrange ment merely, but to arise trom soma inappreciable virtue in the combination of climate, soil, and water, and their relation to each other, in this Island of Ceylon, and in this part of it Some of these peculiarities it is eimy to indicate without it being so easy to understand why tho particular consequence should follow. Tho tract of country in which alone the cinnamon grows to perfection, is situated on tho scacoast exposed to the air ot the ocean. It ii in a climato of equable temperature, which is at once hut and moist hot from ils tropical position, and moist from the frequency and plentifuluess of rnins. The gen-crnl level of the country is low in tho midst of Irosh water lakes, divided from the sea by a narrow riband of land. And tho water in tho soil of the cinnamon gardens is of extraordinary purity, so as to bo fur that reason much in request in tho neighboring cily as a beverage. This exact combination of influences does not occur any where else in Iho island, at least not in tho same degree. Hut the crowning fact is in the nntnre of tho soil. It is in great nnrt pure quartz sand of a greyish to ft pearly white lustre. A specimen of it being carefully dried by Dr. Davy was found to consixl of yp',5 silicious sand, 0,5 vegetable matter and 1 water. This circumstance impresses one very strongly on visiting the cinnamon gardens, it seems so straiiL'O to sco a plain of pure quartz aand whitened in the sun, and covered over with luxuriant growth of tree. In richer soils the aroma is aaid not to develop itself iu the samo concentrated form. Perhaps tho name of garden, which is applied to the cinnamon plantations, may lend to an erroneous conception of their nature. The cinnamon tree taunts cifinmnomtim,) in its natural stato grows to the lieielit ot about twenty teet. but the tiarK, wmcn is tho only valuable part, is found to looso much uf its hitmly amniotic quality in the maturo ireo. ac cordingly, the trees aro cut young, when the steins are only five or six feet long, and less than an inch thick at tho largest end. The bark is then stripped or nceled off in lornr nieces like willow bnrk, scra ped carefully to remove the cuticle, and laid out to dry, during winch it turns up in quills, as they aro ca led. and it is then ready lor tlio market, out im proves by keeping for a while. Tho wood is good tor nothing but fuel. Uwmg to the mode ol cnlii valion, this cinunmon garden has very much the an pearanco of scrub oak, the rich bright green leave ot the small trees being strikingly in contrast tho while plain in which tht-y grow It is possible that the Iragrnuco ol thr cinnnmnn The Frcdi-cewsen of ihc II a mass It sice. An arncle in the ferst number of the North British Review has recent it appeared, ascribed to Dr. Pyo mi I in. ii urings eeiure us some stnkinil facta and solemn reasoning on the various creations which philosophers suppose to have preceded the formation of umn. Tlte doctor refers to the memoir read by. Cuvior in 171HJ, at tho first sitting of tho National Institute, w On the species of fossil Elephants, compa red with Living Species," in which hu demonstrates that the fossil elephant di tiers from all living species, and that it is an extinct species, now lost. Ho undertook to prove ttie like with respect to other animals. "May we ask," said ho, "why we find so muny remains ol unknown animals, whilst we can find none which we can raqk among tho species which we know We ixav see how probable it is that they have all belonged to the beings of a world anterior to ours to beings destroyed by revolutions of the earth, and to beings which have been replaced by existing species." Surrounded by the ej-iiife ol former creations, tlio lank assigned to Cuvier, the article goea on to stale, wus to restore the trun-mentB to their former positions. Uy great labor, ho succeeded in trucing their connection, and re-established lfiti vertebral animals, which form fifty distinct genera, of which fifteen are entirely now; and reckoning the additions which nave since ueen made, there is reason to believe that the species of extinct animals are more numerous than the living ones. lltit Luvier tound tlmt the differences ot structure between fossil and recent animals increase with the age of the deposit in which the former are found, and that these differences mnrk the age of the depos its themselves. As tho primitive rocks exhibit no traces of plants or animals, he concluded that theru was a time when no living beings existed upon the earth ; and that, before tlie creation of man, the world was inhabited by at least three ditlerent generations uf animals, which had been successively created and destroyed. It is supposed with reason, if the subject bo not too grand for our fecblo reason, that the creation of vegetable bodies preceded the crention of the animals that wore to devour them. The stately pine, lite gigantic equtsesactc, and the lofty palm, waveu in tlte primeval toresls, and the sea and ttic laud wero inhabited only by a small number of the marine mammalia, and scarcely any of the tcrrestial mammalia. Wc then arrive at this startling conclusion, that among the earliest inhabitants of tho globe were reptiles of enormous magnitude, the Megalosaurus, being upwards of seventy feet long ; the Ichthyosnu- ' rus, above thirty feet in length ; the Plesiosaurus, un animal combining' tho trunk of an ordinary quadruped, with ft itcck like the body of a serpent, tho hcud of a lizard, the teeth of ft crocodile, and the paddles of a whale; and the Pterodactyle, the most extraordinary of extinct animals uniting the character of a bird, a bat, a reptile, aud ft qundruped ! In the Bee ond period the terrestial mammalia increase in number, and we have along with them Humorous Pachydermnta or animals with thick skins, such as the Paleothcrium and Aiiopclotherium, and other genera of aquatic animals, which dwelt on the margin of lakes and rivers. In the first of thesu extinct genera, the species vary in size, from tho Rhinoceros to tho hog. These and other species, nearly fifty in number, were discovered by Cuvier in the fresh water formations of Muntmartre neur Paris. In the third period lived the Mammoth, tho Mas todon, the HipjtopotamiiH, and those huge Sloths, tl o Megatherium and the Megalonyx, tho giants ot tlio natural world, tho grandest and tho last specimer.sj of that extraordinary population over which man never swayed the sceptre. The lion and the tiger aro supposed to be the successors of the creatures lust mentioned. Up to this stage, no traces of man or of his labors, can be detected, and this gives the remarkable result that the three periods have been succeeded by a fourth, in which the Almighty placed man upon tlie earth, find created, as his subjects and his servants, those races of living beings which occupy the surface of our globe, and inhabit the depths of ils oceans. Referring to the Mosaic record of the creation, tho article to which we have referred comes to this conclusion: "The records of faith now stand on the same level with tlie records of reason. Truth, brought down from on liifh, harmonizes with truiii from below; and tlio Christian who refused to surrender his cherished volume to tho taunts of reason, now holds it with a firmer grasp, and scans the series of creations which Science has revealed, but us the harbinger of that latest exercise of divine power which gavo birth to man, and placed him over ft new animal world. "But the confirmation of tho Mosaic account of the creation is not tho oulv, or even tho chief result of geological discovery. T"he commencement of organic life in plants and animals of the first period, and its higher and progressive development in dit lerent orders, lends us back to that beginning whicli was so long veiled from human reason; while tho successive destruction of successive ci eat ion carries us forward to the terminus of our own period to that 'day of the Lord, when the heavens tdiall pasa away with a great noise, and ihc elements ehull unit with a fervent heat, and tho earth also, and the works which are therein, shall he burned up." The omnipotent nmy have designs to work out, of which we and all we behold are but the preliminary instruments. To us, it is possible, commanding bo ngs will succeed, as different from us as Ihe lion is from tho megalosaurus, more superior to us than wo are to the monkey. We need say nothing to hx tho readers mind on tho reflections which follow : "Should this, apparently last period of animal life. be ono in which man is to exercise his faculties lit the invci titration of his Maker's works, tho fossil ne ology of tho world we now inhabit will exhibit de posits no less interesting than thoso winch embosom the gigantic framowork of mammoths and mastodons. How interesting will bo the excavations in which the buried cities of modern Kurope will re-apnear in - iheir ruined grandeur; how strangoiho discovery of submerged navies embalmed in iheir ocean beds; or tho founderod ship with its imprisoned skeletons; or the battle field, with its prostrate warriors ; or tho hallowed cemetery, crowded with the relics ot ynulli and ape, and crushed beneath their tablets of marble, and their monuments ofbronzol' of iMionle. was very large, double the number of Ohio, Many I univr may have been sensible to voyagers along iho came from r dislam-e of 100 miles. Our informants . C((li 0f Ceylon; but I do not believe that it often stato that tho iiunihrr of Luliea present out numbered any thing of the kind they overwittiittssed; some estimated thorn as high ns 10,000; thcro were W large vehicles, each of which contained UO ladies with banners, and drawn by 10 oxen, some of which camo 50 miles. There were 500 delegates present from Indianapolis, and tho whole linn of counties on tho Wabash, besides all on the J distent part uf tlte atato, were well represented. Keep It before Ihe People Extract from Mr. Clay's Spepc.h in tho Senate, 23rd niarcn, mr-L "Tho Senator (Mr. Calhoun.1 was coMinunllv charging him (Mr. Clay) with tho design of violating the compromise act ! When had he swerved from it? He was still tor adhering to it. as lie understood itx principles. Those principles he did nol consider in- otnpattbie witu the protection ot American industry. in preference to any other. 1 Io bud lived, ami would ilie, an advocate ol the protective system, Hu hnd never changed his principle. They were now tho same as they had ever been; but he submitted to the restrictions of the compromise act as a inn tier of necessity. And he did not even now think it prudent, because not practicable, to go as far as his inclinations led him, with tho friends of protection. Hut as far as ho could go ho would !" Tho Pensacola Gazette, speakinir of tho arrival at Vera Crui of the lion. Wilson Shannon, out Minis ter lo Mexico, says : in the reception of Mr. S. by the authorities of Vera Cruz thero was nothing indicative of ill-feeliuf towards our country. On tho contrary, bo was treat ed with the ceremony and honors due to his charac ter as Lnvoy irom a great people." Wmo SrintT is Maim:. A second trial to elect Members of the Legislature was made inl Portland on Monday laat. iho romilt was as follows. lvnies. Locotocos. s Fesacndcn 11(10 1 1 olden Names 1KU Staples , .VLswfTj Chadwick ll'ili Todd . lOUJ Scattering Oil-Whole Whig ticlftl elected. In HVnilon, Pcpl. Hi, by liir Kev. IN. Emery, Mr. Aaron Kl Ml', to Ml SI M AltO IK t:T TilF, Hy the same, in Omnire, Delaware co., dept. 25, Mr. Jahm I'ook, io Mi Ma mi a Pattviison. Itv llie sHitie, In llloiidon, 8cpl. lo, Mr. JoliR Unas, to Miss I'uttntt k P. tlM.HYtlN. linppnit; no am Ii fact wm pwoiVBt! on bonrcl llio llrnuilyniiio. 'J'horu in vnry lilllo of llns fini-niico ncrccntihle in tlio irnnlcn tliom.ulvci1: niul tlio idea of ila oxlomling nut lo ion ii Isuliod Mill Colombo, John Qitim'y Ailuma lina cniwntcil In deliver a loctnre on Mondny cvciiii.p, tho 7th nf Orlulwr next, nl tin Triniont Tcmplr, huloro the Uiwlou L'lny Cluba. Off hi. n i IXeil, on tlie Glti Srpl., iicnr Akion, on hi wnv Imm. to Tnniilmll ro.,JANit. Mrt'oxBi, lur icwrul jenn n .ti,il uf llit- Ohio ln.uimmti for tlie llliml. Tlii. ainiutilu ami cxi'iiifitary yming mnti w. mnrh cn iI.-uh.kI In llu- Icnrlicn anil pupil., anil nil ulhi-r. wilh .-hum ho ul tiqiininlnl. Ho nn. .I.o a Initial..! ami rmiM.lrnl member f Iho In I'ro.li) lonnn Cliutth in I'.iliimhn; al nit i-jin. be aa a enminul nlVcnilmil on il. trmrin. Ho . lalru irk wliilo on n l,-,r lour wuh ih,, Nnjienim-mloiil nml .eveial pupil, in Au,o.l, ami though evciy ii.iMl- auoii- " l""u "", " rantlly .un. muter llio ullocl bulon. he coulil reach hi. lalher'. lunno. Ib-luro Iho nler ol lliu pjrteil from him, he ,vo ihe moil clieerim evidence, ol .ellgroiiniM hope, and wn have reason lo Iru.t Ihnt tin i. I" -nnilleil to In-hnM uh uurlonilnl eve.. Iln.ir Kluii-S viliirh iu llii lite ue Inn laimj, revealed io tin uienlnl vi. ion. Cum. ij